Unit rationale, description and aim
Media is a gateway to global cultures and communities. The screen is inhabited by personal, corporate and political interests, and is also a melting pot of traditional and emergent content and production practices. Graduates in this space need skills to approach industry engagement, pitch concepts and produce media projects. Just as importantly, media professionals need to be able to bring a critical and ethical lens to the local and international media industry and their work within it. This unit is a capstone unit for the media major and the culmination of the production units offered at ACU. As such it will provide students with the opportunity to apply the skills and theory developed in previous media units to produce a major media production. The unit will provide opportunities to engage with the wider media industry, deepen understandings of production and inform potential career directions.
Students will work individually or collaboratively to devise, pitch and produce a major media production. This production will allow students to apply the skills and theory learned in previous media production units and will provide a significant contribution to the students’ prospective work portfolio increasing the chances of future employment. The unit will also interact with relevant creative industries, practicing media makers and academic researchers, to help students contextualise their work in an industry and further education setting.
This unit aims to bring together the theory and practice of creating content for a range of media platforms, and will provide students with experience of planning and implementing a major media project from concept to publication.
Campus offering
No unit offerings are currently available for this unitLearning outcomes
To successfully complete this unit you will be able to demonstrate you have achieved the learning outcomes (LO) detailed in the below table.
Each outcome is informed by a number of graduate capabilities (GC) to ensure your work in this, and every unit, is part of a larger goal of graduating from ACU with the attributes of insight, empathy, imagination and impact.
Explore the graduate capabilities.
Research and evaluate existing media practices
Learning Outcome 01
Write a script suitable for production and pitch t...
Learning Outcome 02
Synthesize and apply skills learnt through the cou...
Learning Outcome 03
Content
Topics will include:
- Analysis of a range of production genres
- Engagement with industry practitioners
- Advanced scriptwriting
- Advanced video camera skills
- Advanced video editing techniques
- Skills in preparing a media pitch
Assessment strategy and rationale
The assessment strategy for this unit is designed to allow the students to produce an industry informed major production suitable for inclusion in a work portfolio. Assessments will provide authentic experiences. These are sequenced in accordance with constructivist principles from formative tasks completed mainly in workshops, to a more complex summative task that allows students to apply their skills to a major media project
The assessments will be based on industry models where students will conceive of a project, write a script and pitch this to an industry panel. They will then work individually or collaboratively to produce their major production. The assessment will also reflect student engagement with an aspect of the media industry that supports t heir production focus or career goal.
Students will undertake the production of a media project which will be informed by theory and research. Assessments may include: a media industry report, the writing of a script and a pitch of that script, as well as a major media production.
To meet the learning outcomes of this unit students must pass assessment three, which is an evaluation of and report on the outcomes of audience research.
Overview of assessments
Hurdle task This task is relevant for students com...
Hurdle task
This task is relevant for students completing an internship or WIP placement.
1. Identify a suitable placement opportunity and complete the required placement forms.
2. Complete agreed hours and tasks outside of class-time
3. Complete the debriefing report at the end of the placement
0%
Assessment 1: Media Industry report Requires stud...
Assessment 1: Media Industry report
Requires students to research an aspect of the media industry that relates to their production and /or career aspirations and write a report
20%
Assessment 2: Script and pitch Requires students ...
Assessment 2: Script and pitch
Requires students to write a script and present a concept pitch for their major production
30%
Assessment 3: Major Production Requires students ...
Assessment 3: Major Production
Requires students to apply all of the skills attained in the unit to produce and post-produce their major production
50%
Learning and teaching strategy and rationale
Classes will take the form of 3-hour workshops where students will be introduced to advanced practical skills and concepts. These workshops will also include guest speakers and seminars where students can interact with the wider media industry.
The unit is a culmination of the production units offered in the Media major. As such it will provide students with the opportunity to apply the skills and theory developed in previous media units to produce a major media production.
The students will be introduced to a range of media genres to help with their research into their major projects. They will be offered masterclasses in areas such as camera operation, editing and scriptwriting to enhance their learning experience.
They will attend industry seminars that will introduce them to an authentic real-world experience and help broaden their options. This will include guest experts with real direct linkage to the industry where available. With permission from the lecturer in charge, students may undertake a non-assessed short internship or work-integrated placement in a media setting in this unit.
Representative texts and references
Cultural Protocols
Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Cultural Protocols for Indigenous Reporting in the Media https://www.wipo.int/export/sites/www/tk/en/databases/creative_heritage/docs/abc_cultural_protocol.pdf
Australia Council, Protocols for Using First Nations Cultural and Intellectual Property in the Arts, https://australiacouncil.gov.au/investment-and-development/protocols-and-resources/protocols-for-using-first-nations-cultural-and-intellectual-property-in-the-arts/
Terri Janke, Pathways and Protocols: A Filmmaker’s guide to Working With Indigenous People, Culture and Concepts, Screen Australia, https://www.screenaustralia.gov.au/getmedia/16e5ade3-bbca-4db2-a433-94bcd4c45434/Pathways-and-Protocols.pdf
REPRESENTATIVE TEXTS AND REFERENCES
Bowe, H., Martin, K & Manns, H 2014, Communication Across Cultures: Mutual Understanding in a Global World, 2nd edn., Melbourne: Cambridge University Press.
Pearson, Dainton, M & Zelley, E, 2015, Applying Communication Theory for Professional Life: A Practical Introduction, 4th ed.n, SAGE, Thousand Oaks.
Grove, E., 2014, Raindance Producers' Lab Lo-To-No Budget Filmmaking, 2nd edn., Focal Press, Burlington.
Euson, B 2016, Communicating in the 21st Century, 4th edn., John Wiley & Sons, Australia.
J & Millerson, G 2012, Television Production, 15th edn., Focal Press,
Mollison, M., 2010, Producing Videos: A Complete Guide, 3rd edn., Allen & Unwin, Sydney.
Wood, J., 2017, Communication Mosaics: An Introduction to the Field of Communication, 8th edn., Wadsworth Publishing, Boston