On last.fm: Exclusive interview with Phoenix
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

March 17th, 2008

iMovie lets students focus on content, not videography

Posted by Christopher Dawson @ 9:47 pm

Categories: Education Technology

Tags: Apple iMovie, Video, Corporate Communications, Marketing, Christopher Dawson

A group of students borrowed my MacBook today to edit and produce a newscast. They had filmed the video on a new hard drive-based digital video camera and neither the Macs in the journalism lab nor their own Windows XP Home machines were up to the task of importing the video. Leopard came to the rescue, however, and iMovie launched immediately when we plugged in the USB 2.0 cable (this latest generation of video cameras doesn’t use Firewire).

Within moments, all of the video had been imported, although it took almost 20 minutes for iMovie to create “thumbnails” of the video for editing. I guess that’s one of the new features they were talking about in Leopard.

The most interesting piece of this, though, was that the students had all posted the occasional quick video to YouTube, but had never really pieced together scenes with titles, credits, music, voiceovers, etc. Since I was teaching a class, I didn’t have time to give them much of a tutorial, so I pointed them to the video tutorials built into iMovie, answered the occasional question, and otherwise let them loose.

Within an hour, the students had not only mastered the interface, but had assembled a professional-looking video and automatically compressed it and exported it to YouTube for presentation to their class the next day. Because the interface was so straight-forward, the actual editing process became far less important than the creative process of stringing the scenes together in a cohesive production. All of the students involved were utterly focused on the message they were giving to their audience; the bells and whistles were secondary. As most of us know, the bells and whistles tend to be foremost in the minds of these digital natives.

Now if Apple can just create the moral equivalent of the calculator, maybe I can get my students to focus on the concepts I’m presenting and just use their calculators as tools. Anyone at Apple care to develop a better calculator? They certainly developed a better video editing package with iMovie.

Christopher Dawson

Follow Chris Dawson on Twitter! Christopher Dawson is the technology director for the Athol-Royalston School District in northern Massachusetts and a member of the Internet Press Guild. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations, but always keep in mind that the opinions expressed here are his own and not those of his daytime employer, even if he talks incessantly about his day job.

Email Christopher Dawson

Subscribe to ZDNet Education via Email alerts or RSS.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 13 Talkback(s)
AllCapture and TurboDemo
If you ask me, iMovie has its legitimacy. But, it is not re-inventing the wheel. Don't know the pricing of it, but as a low-end alternative to Premiere or Avid, it should do the the job. Nevertheless,... (Read the rest)
Posted by: JayGreen Posted on: 04/08/08 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Can you please post the YouTube links?  dkawalec | 03/18/08
The point of the project...  mrdatahsZDNet Moderator | 03/18/08
I understand ...  dkawalec | 03/18/08
apple sucks  grouper@... | 03/18/08
iLife really is a reason to switch  mrdatahsZDNet Moderator | 03/18/08
Have you tried  kozmcrae | 03/18/08
Another option  jkert | 03/18/08
Re: Camtasia  we3morenos@... | 03/18/08
been a while  jamesb2147 | 03/18/08
That may be the case  mrdatahsZDNet Moderator | 03/18/08
Quicktime did it before  j.m.galvin | 03/18/08
RE: iMovie lets students focus on content, not videography  jjortizcarlo@... | 03/18/08
AllCapture and TurboDemo  JayGreen | 04/08/08

What do you think?

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

advertisement

Recent Entries

advertisement

Archives

Favorite Links

ZDNet Blogs

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads