Iveland
kids film janitor's day
A team of Iveland
Elementary kids, armed with camcorders, have been trailing
janitor Harlon Williams. They're filming "A Day in the
Life of Harlon the Great."
That's one of
the tentative titles for a documentary film they're making.
The film will be one of those entered in the 1st annual Show-Me
a Movie contest.
Winners of the
competition will have their films shown at the Midwest Educational
Technology Conference in February.
(For more
about the contest, you can go to www.csd.org/showmemovie/index.htm)
Eleven-year-old
Skylar Stradtmann said the plot of the movie is to "show
that our school wouldn't be as nice as it is without him."
Skylar is one
of seven 5th graders on the documentary film team.
The Show-Me film competition is in its first year. But, the
Iveland kids are familiar with making films.
They're all members
of the ITV Team that makes one to five feature films each
year.
Iveland's ITV
program is in its 9th year. Some of the kids on
the Show-Me team refer to themselves as the "old guys"
because they have been in the program for three years.
Eleven-year-old
Aiden Simmons said the goal is to make one film each month.
Those films are a collection of film clips about various activities
at the school. The ITV crew then edits the clips into their
30-minute feature.
Ten-year-old Leah
Carlson said the biggest problem with their Show-Me film project
is editing down all their material. The Show-Me film can't
be more than 2 minutes long.
Leah said, "Trimming
the film is very difficult. We had one 4-minute film segment
that we had to delete altogether."
The kids took
turns following Harlon, filming him doing his various janitorial
jobs.
Ten-year-old Kaitlyn
Magee had the job of filming Harlon while he worked during
the kids' lunch hour. Ten-year-old Rebekah Shoults filmed
him helping with breakfasts.
But, the kids
recreated the filming of Harlon opening the school at 6 a.m.
None of them were up at that time. They had him go through
the motions later in the day.
The school opening
sequence is one part where they used some special effects.
Showing him turning on lights on each of the three floors
would take too long. So they filmed one light switching and
repeated it quickly three times.
Another special
effect was using fast-forward in editing. That did two things.
First, it emphasized the many things Harlon does. Also it
cut down the time used on film.
Eleven-year-old
Jaceta Butler said the best thing she's learned was how to
program special effects on the school's Avio editing machine.
She said she'd had some prior filming experience.
"I helped
an older cousin do her film project. I went around the neighborhood
taking pictures of animals," she said.
Ten-year-old Courtney
Parker said another special effect in their movie was the
"picture in a picture." That involves a main emphasis
on Harlon's work but there's a small picture of his supervisor
cut into the upper left hand corner.
The supervisor's
words are heard as the sound-track of the movie.
The kids had a
real scare about part way through the editing. While using
the Avio editing system to put together their latest ITV feature,
someone clicked the wrong button.
Leah Carlson said,
"We thought we had lost all the Harlon stuff." However,
librarian Barb Morris retrieved the material before it was
deleted from of the editing equipment.
The kids have
put their Show-Me film together without a script. But, they
have a storyboard that shows how they want the various parts
to go together.
In fact, the quality
of the storyboard is one of the judging categories. The winning
films will be those that show the best 1. content, 2. creativity,
3. storyboarding, 4. videography, and 5. reflection.
The reflection
sheet will give the students' assessment of what they were
trying to accomplish with the film.
The Show-Me contest
has three age classifications: Elementary, Grades 3-5; Middle,
Grades 6-8, and High, Grades 9-12. Iveland is entered in the
Elementary division. The deadline for the Show-Me contest
is December 20.
Still to be decided
in the Iveland project is how the film will open and how it
will end.
But, Kaitlyn Magee
summed up what most of the kids believe. She said, "Making
movies is fun."