Showing posts with label syllabus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label syllabus. Show all posts

Friday, 20 June 2014

Assignment C: Animoto Review Video

Assignment C  Animoto Review Video


Assignment


In this course we have covered a variety of topics such as Twitterature, born digital fictions, transmedia narrative and hyptertext. Think of a topic or even a specific work that is of great interest to you. Perhaps you were drawn into the growing pains of Alice in Inanimate Alice or would like to dig deeper into documentary born digital narrative. I would like you to choose your topic and create a (free) 30 second video using Animoto. You will need to include text, images and sound. You can draw from Animotos offerings or find copyright free images using the Creative Commons search on Flickr.

Your finished Animoto video must be shared both via Twitter (@JessL and use our class hashtag) AND the class blog, include a link to it in the comments of the Assignment D: Animoto Review Video blog post.

You must also include a comment about another students Animoto video. This comment can be separate or included with your video link comment.

Due in class on June 20th

NOTE: our eclass does not accept links so please paste a link to your assignment blog post into a word document and upload that to moodle.

Sunday, 1 June 2014

Module 6: Cross-Platform Stories


Module 6
Cross-Platform Stories

Activities/Assignments
      Add a comment to Module 6’s blog post with your reaction to the transmedia story examples. Have you ever read anything like these works before? How can you be sure you have read the whole narrative? Jill Walker suggests that the disunity that arises from reading such works highlights a different kind of unity – that the work unfolds at the same time as our reading. What do you think?
      Assignment C – Animoto Video Review due at end of day June 20 th  

Saturday, 31 May 2014

Module 5: Twitter Fiction


Module 5
Twitter Fiction

Activities/Assignments
      Add a comment to Module 5’s blog post in which you respond to Carla Raguseo’s statement: “Twitter fiction can provide learners with a rich language experience in easily digestible fragments. It challenges them both as readers and as writers to attempt and explore multiple meanings and to develop academic skills such as synthesizing and paraphrasing while fostering structural and semantic awareness in playful experimentation.”
      Live tweet @JessL THREE initial reactions and responses as you make your way through ONE of the three Twitterature readings         

Friday, 30 May 2014

Module 4: Writing for Social Media (Marketing)


Module 4
Writing for Social Media (Marketing)
Activities/Assignments
      Add a comment to Module 4’s blog post with your reaction to infographics. Are you a staunch supporter of their engaging presentation of information or do you abhor their excessive inclusion of unnecessary design elements?
      Tweet @JessL with two examples of how Twitter can sharpen your writing.

Thursday, 29 May 2014

Module 3: Born Digital Fictions


Module 3
Born Digital Fictions

Activities/Assignments
      Add a comment to Module 3’s blog post with your response to TWO of the digital fictions we read this week  
      Send a tweet to @JessL with a comment about the Module 3 PowerPoint lecture. What did you learn about transliteracy and from reading born digital fictions like Inanimate Alice? Will you read more born digital fictions?

Tuesday, 27 May 2014

Module 2: Hypertext


Module 2
Hypertext

Activities/Assignments
      Assignment B – Storify Assignment. Students will begin the assignment in class with the final “copy” due by 11:55 pm June 19th