Documentation:Video Basics/DIY Media/Script

From UBC Wiki


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CHECKLIST:
Group your content into 3 to 6 minute segments.
Review principles for learning, instruction and multimedia development.
Create script and storyboard.
Set up your recording environment.
Visit your location
Coordinate with subjects and assistants


Every minute you spend planning your project is worth two or three minutes of designing, recording, and editing. Before you do anything else, download and fill out this worksheet. Try to be as detailed as possible: it'll make life easier later on.

Chunk content

One of the most important features in the planning worksheet is the 'Generate Concepts' section. This will help you break your content down into easily digestible sections, a technique also known as chunking content. Chunking content involves breaking down large themes into manageable chunks or concepts: for example, if you intend to cover 4 concepts in a single video of 20 minutes, breaking the long video into four five-minute chunks will make it likelier that the material will be watched and effectively absorbed. Recent research indicates that the optimal length for student engagement is 6 minutes or less. (Guo, 2013).

Review principles

UBC's Design Principles for Multimedia provides an overview and basic framework for considering evidence based principles when designing multimedia for learning.

For more depth, Carnegie-Mellon's principles for learning, Merrill's First Principles of Instruction, Gagne's 9 events of instruction and Mayer's principles for multimedia development are useful references for helping you think about how to approach your presentation as a learning resource.

Storyboarding

After you've selected one chunk to start with, you can fill out this storyboarding worksheet. You can fill this out however you want to: for more traditional video projects, storyboards usually include sketches of each scene with notes attached, but you can feel free to use text, draft your script, draw each slide, sketch diagrams you might use, or some combination of those and other techniques.

Create a script

Writing a script will save you time in the long run. Creating a storyboard can help you see where you may want to add additional content, like b-roll images, to provide examples and raise interest. Once your storyboard is complete, you will get a sense of the flow of your project and can make decisions about editing more easily. Once your script and storyboard are complete, you'll get a sense of the flow of your project and can make decisions about editing more easily.

  • Make sure to rehearse your script(s), to avoid unnecessary pauses or verbal stumbles when you're recording.
  • Note which slide will be on-screen while you're speaking. Some people find it useful to include pictures of the slides in the script, to remind them of what the viewer will see while they're speaking.
  • Time your script to ensure it fits within the 3-6 minute timeframe you should be aiming for.
  • Try to write naturally: not only will people learn better (Mayer's 10th principle) but it'll be easier to read from: encountering the words it is when you'd usually say 'it's is distracting, and can throw you off.
  • Review your presentation for extraneous material, and remove it: the occasional anecdote or tangentially related point is fine, but the shorter your video is, the likelier it'll be watched to completion, and staying focused on your topic is important. (Mayer's 1st principle.)

Prepare Your Subject and Shoot Location. You will need to consider who will be involved in your production, arrange schedules, permissions, and any other needs ahead of time. You will also want to check out the location for things light conditions, power sources, noise and travel.

Pre-Production Resources

Storyboard/Scripts


Forms

  • You will require a release from any subjects who will appear on-screen in your production. UBC's Consent Form.
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TIPS:
  • Try to keep to the 3 minute mark per concept with a total video length of not more than 6 minutes.
  • Planning will save time later Take time to prepare a storyboard and script.
  • Keep it simple and remember your objective.