creating a nimble new curriculum for digital media artists

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Creating a Nimble New Curriculum for Digital Media Artists Nicola Marae Allain, Ph. D. SUNY Empire State College Saratoga Springs, NY 12866 USA [email protected] This is a presentation given during a Siggraph 2013 talk, on new approaches to curriculum design that allow digital media artists to collaborate on interdisciplinary media arts or design projects within virtual environments while pursuing individualized degrees. Abstract: Emerging technologies, digital media environments, and mobile media are rapidly changing the landscape of learning required for digital media artists. The author discusses the undergraduate digital media arts program and in the Master of Arts in Learning and Emerging Technologies (MALET) at SUNY Empire State College. These new programs allow established and emergent digital media artists to collaborate on interdisciplinary, immersive media arts or design projects within virtual environments while pursuing individualized degrees. Our nimble approach to learning design includes mentoring intensive models, fully online courses, mobile learning, prior learning assessment, and totally individualized learning on subjects proposed by students. Students co-create at a distance in collaborative virtual environments as part of their learning. This immersion includes the integration of a complex set of skills – habituation to being within an avatar embodiment, habile navigation, communication etiquette, and orienting oneself to the environment. This develops a sense of community and team-building that provides essential skills for 21st Century artists. In immersive and mobile learning situations, students must also interact with, and create, a variety of digital media tools in interdisciplinary contexts. These studies engage highly skilled artists from different genres in the creation of digital stories, films, interactive web media, visual narratives, games, and mixed media. They come together in experimental environments to develop full-fledged projects in virtual “creative teams”, and showcase their work in immersive Media Arts Festivals or Design Showcases. Students in mobile media design mobile applications using mobile devices. Advanced students practice a deep analysis of artistic processes and possibilities while pursuing pathways in digital media arts genres. These nimble new approaches provide opportunities for “real life” learning and the sophisticated digital skills required of 21st Century digital media artists.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Creating a nimble new curriculum for digital media artists
Page 2: Creating a nimble new curriculum for digital media artists

Emerging technologies, digital media environments, and mobile media are rapidly changing the landscape of learning required for digital media artists.

The author will discuss the theory and practice of immersion applied in the Center for Distance Learning undergraduate digital media arts program and in the Graduate School Master of Arts in Learning and Emerging Technologies (MALET) at SUNY Empire State College.

These courses and programs are primarily taught online and at a distance. They include the option of individualized studies and one to one courses in multiple learning modalities, including face to face and limited residencies.

Digital Media Arts & Emerging Technologies

Page 3: Creating a nimble new curriculum for digital media artists

These new programs allow established and emergent digital media artists to collaborate on interdisciplinary, immersive media arts or design projects within virtual environments while pursuing individualized degrees.

Faculty teaching in the program are scholar/artists in multiple digital media arts, with strong training in digital storytelling from interdisciplinary perspectives, media theory, and research practice in immersive learning design.

A typical CDL student brings transfer credit and extensive professional experience. Many of them were previously awarded an associate’s degree in a digital media field. Most are eligible to complete prior learning assessment for college level learning credits.

Digital Media @CDL & MALET

Page 4: Creating a nimble new curriculum for digital media artists

Though we accept entry level students, our students often have previous training in one or more of the following areas:

digital art and design, computer arts, video, electronic music, digital storytelling, filmmaking, game design, animation, visual effects, motion graphics, animation art and design, digital photography, 3D virtual worlds, digital performance, mobile media design, and audio production. We also draw advanced students with professional backgrounds in the visual and performing arts.

Our nimble approach to learning design includes mentoring intensive models, fully online courses, mobile learning, prior learning assessment, and totally individualized learning on subjects proposed by students.

Digital Media Students

Page 5: Creating a nimble new curriculum for digital media artists

SUNY Empire State College is founded upon a mentoring rich model, in which students are paired with a faculty mentor for the duration of their studies. The mentor works closely with the student on degree planning, academic advising, preparing prior learning assessment requests, career planning, and related areas. Mentors also set up independent learning opportunities for students.

Prior Learning Assessment: Students may request credits for college level learning from their prior professional or personal experiences. After consultation with their mentor, the student prepares a learning essay on the requested topic (with a portfolio or links to interactive works if in the arts), which is submitted to an expert evaluator for review. The evaluation process usually includes an in-depth interview with the evaluator.

Mentoring Model & Prior Learning Assessment

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Students propose a degree plan meeting the Area of Studies Guidelines (for digital media, this is usually in the arts), SUNY General Education Guidelines (selecting courses in 7 out of 10 areas, including communication and mathematics), and the Educational Studies requirement.

This is a rigorous process. The degree plan must show integration of general learning with concentration, demonstrating depth and breadth with a logical progression of studies. The degree plan must be accompanied by a rationale essay and submitted to an assessment committee for review and approval.

For a bachelor’s degree: credits required: 128. Transfer credits allowed: up to 96. Advanced credits required: 45. Minimum advanced concentration credits: 24. For BA: 96 liberal credits required. For BS: 64 liberal credits needed.

Degree Planning with Rationale Essay

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Degree concentration titles may be standard (such as Digital Media Arts, Digital Storytelling, Digital Art and Design, Media Arts, etc.) or customized (such as Writing for Games, Digital Storytelling and Games, Illustration and Animation).

In addition to online courses, our students have access to the entire catalog of individual and small group courses offered by faculty across the college.

Advanced Digital Media Arts courses engage highly skilled artists from different genres in the creation of digital stories, films, interactive web media, visual narratives, games, and mixed media.

With the development of free, open online applications and environments, students are now able to participate in creative arts collaborations at a distance.

Emerging Digital Media Arts

Page 8: Creating a nimble new curriculum for digital media artists

Creative Collaboration

Page 9: Creating a nimble new curriculum for digital media artists

Animation

Digital Art and Design

Digital Storytelling

Digital Photography

Interactive Media

Game Design/Writing/Development

Filmmaking

Media Arts

Media & Learning

Mobile Media

Performing Arts & Technologies

Sound Design

Writing for Digital Media

Digital Media: Emergent Student Interests

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Online Courses:

Digital Art and Design, Introductory

Digital Art and Design, Advanced.

Digital Storytelling

Information Design

Media Arts

History and Theory of New Media

*sample

CDL Digital Media Studies

Independent Studies*:

Advanced Media Arts Project

Advanced Interactive Design

Design Writing and Research

Games as Interactive Storytelling

Creating Worlds

Post-Production Technologies

Studies in Mobile Media

3D Virtual Worlds

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Supporting CDL Studies: Art, Media & Culture• The Photographic Vision• Illustration• Creative Writing: Fiction• Television and Culture• American Cinema• Women, Girls and the Media• The Future of Being Human (Science and Technology

Focus)• Arts Management• Images of Women in Western Civilization• Visual Literacy• What is Art?• Proposal Writing• Communication Through New Media• Capstone in Media and CommunicationIn addition, students usually include studies from SMAT (programming) and BME (Advertising and Marketing).

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Capstone Course

Most students complete an individualized capstone focusing on their area of interest, such as:Capstone in Art, Nature, CultureCapstone in Commercial PhotographyCapstone in Digital Art and DesignCapstone in Digital Media LiteracyCapstone: Game ScriptCapstone: Media ArtsCapstone: Performing Arts Management (with technical focus)

They may also complete an advanced project course, such as:Advanced Media Arts ProjectAdvanced Interactive DesignIndividualized Arts Project

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1. Consider the social, ethical and legal impacts of new technologies on our lives, individually and collectively.

2. Explore the multiple, unfolding political and economic impacts of digital media as a transformative agent in the global civic and market arenas.

3. Develop an understanding of how people learn in technology-mediated environments.

4. Examine and evaluate learning that occurs in technology mediated environments, and the impact of digital tools, resources and pedagogical methods in these settings.

5. Acquire the skills and capacity to identify, employ and evaluate technologically supported tools and methodologies.

6. Conduct original research projects both individually and in collaborative faculty-student teams in order to expand knowledge in the field.

Master of Arts in Learning and Emerging Technologies (MALET) Program Goals

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MALET Curriculum

Term 1 Core Courses

Term 2 Core Courses

Term 3 Core Courses

Learning with Emerging Technologies: Theory and Practice

Design of Online Learning Environments

Evaluating Learning In Participatory Learning Environments

New Media and New Literacies

Social and Ethical Issues in the Digital Era

Advanced Design Seminar: Portfolio Project

Term 1 Term 2 Term 3Elective Elective Pro-SeminarElective Elective Research or Capstone

Project

Table 2: YEAR 2 Electives and Research Seminars

Table 1: YEAR 1 Core Courses

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MALET Curriculum

Table 3: Elective TypesProgram Courses Other Courses Practicu

m• Game Based Learning • Individualized Studies Research• Identities and

Communities in Immersive Environments

• Advanced Program Planning/Systems Thinking

• Selections from other graduate programs:

MBA, MA in Social Policy, MLA (liberal studies), MAT (teaching), MAAL (adult learning)

DesignTeaching

• Advanced Evaluation and Analytics

• Selections from certificate programs,

 

• Computers, Ethics and Society

including new media and digital performance technologies

 

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Engaging in collaborate arts requires the mastery of advanced tools, techniques and technologies.

This presents a particular set of challenges when the learning, and collaboration, takes places within online and distance learning contexts.

Questions we have addressed:

How will students learn new tools?

How will they collaborate at a distance?

How will they access equipment and space needed to create films and other media arts projects?

How do we assess the work?

Our Challenge: Creation at a Distance

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How will students learn new tools?

With the exception of the Digital Art and Design courses, students are expected to be autonomous in their learning, and be willing to learn tools on their own.

They are encouraged to find how-to resources and tutorial videos online, and subscribe to excellent technical instruction courses such as the ones available at Lynda.com.

Each course has a collaborative learning area for students to ask questions and assist each other with technical issues.

The Autonomous Learner

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How will they collaborate at a distance?

Students come together in experimental environments to develop full-fledged projects in virtual “creative teams”, and showcase their work in an immersive Media Arts Festival (held in the virtual world Second Life™).

They select the collaboration tools for their teams. These include Skype, Second Life™, Google Hangout, Mobile Applications, Dropbox, and other freely available communication technologies.

They have the option of using the tools built into the learning management platform, but most students prefer other tools.

Experimental Environments

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Initial Immersion

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• Students come equipped with a minimum of a computer and a smartphone.

• Students transferring extensive coursework or prior professional experience have sophisticated programs and tools. They may purchase applications at educational discounts.

• Smartphone cameras and video capability allow students to create short videos. Mobile applications add enhanced features.

• Pre and post production software programs are freely available as open source tools. Digital storytelling applications are available at no cost.

• Some students have access to sophisticated “on ground” equipment and studio space. Others use various accessible locations to create their projects.

Access to Equipment and Spaces

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Learning Integration

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How do we assess the work?

• Project based assessment

• Portfolio based assessment

• Iterative approach/formative feedback

• Summative Feedback

• Students document all proposals, planning, forms, contracts, scripts, flowcharts, storyboards and processes on student led blogs (which are evaluated by faculty).

• Substantive discussion is expected and assessed.

• Virtual Field Trips participation and critiques are assessed.

• Peer-review and critique.

• Students write final reflective narratives.

• Course-specific rubrics (i.e. for digital storytelling or advanced design).

Assessment

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Courses in digital storytelling and digital art and design prepare students to display the high level of artistic production values expected in the Media Arts course.

Advanced students practice a deep analysis of the artistic process and possibilities while pursuing pathways in the genre of their choice in the History and Theory of New Media.

Combined, these exciting new studies at CDL provide opportunities for “real life” learning, enhanced environments, and the sophisticated digital skills required of 21st Century media artists.

Digital Skills Development

Page 24: Creating a nimble new curriculum for digital media artists

Nicola Marae Allain, Ph. D., Faculty/Mentor & Academic Area Coordinator, Digital MediaCore Faculty, Master of Arts in Learning & Emerging TechnologiesCenter for Distance Learning,Empire State College, State University of New York 

[email protected]: http://nicolamarae.comTwitter: http://twitter.com/Nicola_Marae

             

Creating a Nimble New Curriculum for Digital Media Artists by Nicola Marae Allain, PhD is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

Thank You!