The New Regime

Erik and mentorsYes, I am still up at almost 1:30 AM after staying up until about 4 AM last night preparing for a presentation for New American Media at Mission Vocational School. It was spur of the moment request and I wanted to help as much as I could to bring multimedia concepts of visualization and interactivity to ethnic media and press. It was a small but engaged group ranging from staff at El Mensajero, El Tecolote, to Alizanza and the members of the Chinese media. I wish Erik and I could have trained them all day because we barely scratched the surface by introducing them to concepts of linear and interactive storytelling and free tools to make their stories engaging. I am really looking forward to the day long training in Sacramento in April, no details yet, but will post soon enough. 

I had hopes that after the training I could hop over to KQED’s training of trainers but there was no chance. So instead we headed over to the Presidio (after a pit stop at the SPCA –only because I’m a sadomasochist knowing full well I can’t own a dog because I rent. Why can’t I just be a foster dog walker parent?) In any case, he headed over to the Presidio for Do Something’s Speed Pitching session.

It’s a great concept and we had an excellent and inspiring time listening to young people pitch their ideas in 2-minute pitch sessions then cow bell, and a two-minute feedback session with the person across from them. Cow bell and NEXT! The next round I definitely think the mentors doing the listening should pitch their own ideas to the young people and see how the adults do. I love swapping up the leader and follower roles because it provides so many learning opportunities. An unexpected surprise is that I met a young person who is doing a documentary on air toxicity in West Oakland and I was able to provide him a great deal of guidance on how to approach his documentary and also turn him on Spot.Us as a possible funding opportunity!

KQED Storytelling classes

I’m glad they’re offering different class levels. Check’em out, they’re free!

“We’ve reviewed and revised our workshop schedule, streamlining our traditional workshop and adding more variety by including place-based digital storytelling using Google applications like Google Earth and Google Maps. All workshops take participants through the 4-step process, from concept to completion, from idea to publishing. Our train-the-trainers workshops are specifically geared towards people who have already attended a workshop or have experience in the digital storytelling process. Our goal will be to move to participants to the next level, both in story theory and with the hardware and software.

Three Varieties of Digital Storytelling Workshops

1. Traditional Digital Storytelling Basics
This 1-day (plus short intro) workshop is a hands-on and project-based; it teaches the skills of traditional digital storytelling.

Thursday, February 5, (5pm-7pm), Short Intro
Saturday, February 7, (9am-5pm)

Thursday, March 5, (5pm-7pm), Short Intro
Saturday, March 7, (9am-5pm)

Thursday, February 26, (5pm-7pm), Short Intro
Saturday, February 28, (9am-5pm)
(This workshop is science-specific, co-facilitated by Jessica Neely)

2. Place-based Digital Storytelling Using New Media Tools
This 1-day (plus short intro) workshop uses Google Maps/Earth to create place-based digital stories.

Thursday, March 12, (5pm-7pm), Short Intro
Saturday, March 14, (9am-5pm)
(This workshop is science-specific, co-facilitated by Jessica Neely)

3. Train-the-Trainers
This 1-day workshop is for those already familiar with the digital storytelling process or with multimedia content creation and wish to learn how to train others,

Saturday, January 17, (9am-5pm)
Saturday, March 21, (9am-5pm)”