Tuesday, May 27, 2008

A story in 60 minutes



Today was a day of intense hands on work on the computers. Participants were introduced to Microsoft's Photo Story software. Through this very user-friendly software, they learnt how to sequence images, add voice-over, apply motion - pan and zoom and use inter-slide transitions.




Next was an exciting exercise. Participants were given a set of 20 images and 5 soundtracks (of various moods) for background music. Each had to select any 6 images of their choice and, using voiceovers, transitions, movements and other techniques learnt earlier, had to make a short story.



It was interesting to see the different stories than came from the same set of 20 images!

Fun by Joseph


Lonely by Nileema


Hope by Pamela


Musings by Milan


Confusion by Preeti


The above videos are first-time efforts by participants as an exercise in digital story telling and were completed in one hour. More to come as the workshop progresses.

GoCreat Workshop on DST

Today, May 26, GoCreat begins a 5-day workshop on Digital Storytelling (see brochure). We have 5 very enthusiastic participants with varying backgrounds, all raring to go! Among us we have, a journalist, an artist, two MA students of Sociology and one 14-year old student of std 9.



Alito started the participants off with an introduction to the concept of DST and the film "Mom Not Mom" was screened (watch the film on the Digital Storytelling Center website).



The participants then expressed their feelings after viewing the film using crayon on paper. And boy, did we get variety!


- Pamela


- Joseph


- Milan


- Nileema


- Preeti


- Alito


- Gasper

Next everyone got hands on experience in basic photo editing using the free Google software - Picasa.

By the end of the day, participants put together their first draft story in about 250 words. They then evaluated their own stories using the Seven Principles of Storytelling. This is the story they will be working on, over the next 5 days, converting it into a DST.



The current DST workshop is a followup of our experiences working with the Siolim Diaries project viewed at: siolimdiaries.blogspot.com.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

What's in a Story?



Rahul Srivastava, co-director of PUKAR, Partners for Urban Knowledge Action and Research, a Mumbai-based research initiative delivered a talk to members of GoCreat on what makes a good story.

Rahul has written on the environment, popular culture and new knowledge practices. He has studied sociology and anthropology in India and the United Kingdom.

Listen to excerpts of Rahul's discourse...

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Challenging times for journalists


"Rarely can a single person excel at so many skill sets"
- Steve Herman, South Asia correspondent, Voice of America

Steve Herman, delivering his address at the seminar on Convergence in Media at St Xavier's College, Mapusa, spoke about the perils and challenges that technology has thrown at media houses and journalists.

Does asking a single journalist to work in multiple media simultaneously reduce the quality of the final product? With so many sources of information, can we trust all we see or read on the Internet?

According to Steve, as long as media houses and journalists remain responsible and consumers are able to discern the factual from the fictitious, we are headed for a truly positive media revolution.

Listen to excerpts from Steve Herman's talk (8min 7MB):

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Converge for your own good


"Convergence for a journalist today is a fact of life. You have to live with it, you have to train for it, you have to be ready to develop and use the many skills required of you today."
- Prem Panicker, Editor - Rediff.com

Students, j-School lecturers and journalists were given a brief dose of convergence in media and the emergence of the new journalist during Prem's talk at the Convergence seminar at St Xavier's College, Mapusa.

Prem spoke of the need for journalists to equip themselves with new skills required for multimedia story-telling. Skills such as the ability to record good sound and video clips and use of digital cameras. But more importantly, Prem stressed on the need for maintaining the age-old focus on content. Multimedia journalists are not just techies with tools. They need to think about each story they work on. Today it is not just enough to research and write your story. You also need to think about what medium is best to tell that story. More importantly, different aspects of the same story may be told using different media. The ability of a journalist today, to combine various media into a multimedia package is what would make a sought-after journalist.

Using his own experiences as a background for his talk, Prem made his point clear - learn the new skills and improve your story-telling ability in the new media or languish in the old.

Listen to this audio recorded at the seminar (13 min | 12MB):

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Freezing in on a Story


The group has had a couple of "coming together" meetings. After brainstorming sessions over tea and "batata wadas" we froze in on the theme "Market"

Within this broad theme, each participant came up with ideas for individual stories. They got to know what makes for a "strong story" while at the same time, being feasible/manageable.

We used the online courses from the BBC Training website (bbctraining.com) and participants learnt how to "Prepare to tell a story"

Key concepts learnt for good storytelling were:
1. A Hook
2. Characters
3. A setting
4. A key question

During the second meet, the documentary "Walmart - High Price of Low Cost" was screened, since the topic we chose was Market.

After deliberations, we narrowed in on the following story ideas:
1. Child's view of the market (an audio slideshow perhaps)
2. Sounds of vendor calls (an audio presentation)
3. A multimedia (still images and video) feature on the remnants of the old economy (traditional vendors selling products prepared by them) struggling to survive in the new world.
4. Personal relationships formed in the marketplace.


More later...

Welcome to GoCreat

GoCreat is an experiment in multimedia story-telling and innovative pedagogy. It seeks to bring together individuals of various backgrounds with a common desire to use new-media as a powerful tool for expressing themselves.
Based in Goa, India, the group comprises of a photojournalist, a lecturer of the Goa University, a newspaper journalist and a bunch of enthusiastic students. By-and-by you will be introduced to this intrepid bunch.
What can you expect on this blog? As the main description goes, it is a work in progress and will document the experiences of the group as we seek to use multimedia tools and techniques to tell stories.