Friday, October 15, 2010

The Crucible SchoolTube Enactment Project

Seventeenth-Century Salem, Massachusetts brochures are scanned and on display in Room 106. The Crucible enactment videos are available for viewing and commenting on SchoolTube, and post-project teacher-student interviews are complete. The results exceed my expectations and I feel privileged to be teaching in a project-based 21st-Century Learning Environment.

The products within The Crucible SchoolTube Enactment Project include: Creating a Del.ici.ous social bookmarking account, publishing a brochure, writing a video storyboard map, filming a scene enactment from The Crucible, and publishing a video on the Internet.

In the first stage of the unit, the student must use the Del.ici.ous website to gather information regarding 17th C. Salem. She learns to use advanced Google search skills and seek out "reliable" data. The November Learning site is a great resource for more information on this.

The student uses the information gathered in the web hunt to create a brochure. Creating the brochure lends to an understanding of why Arthur Miller chose Salem as the setting of his play. The student uses the setting details later in the project when filming the enactment video.


In groups of three, students choose a theme from the play, then decide which scene in The Crucible epitomizes the chosen theme. The next step for the group is to plan how they will enact their scene by writing a video storyboard map. Students answer the questions: What props will they use?, What is the setting of the enactment?, What dialogue will they use?, How will they act out the scene?, and What elements from "The Play" will they use? All of this information is outlined again, in an essay submitted on Google Docs at the end of the project.


Students begin the acting and filming process as soon as the storyboard is complete. Room 106 offers two cameras (a Canon Digital Compact and Canon Flash Memory Camcorder), and there are 7-9 groups per class for this project. Watching students embrace this part of the project is one of the most gratifying stages in the process. In lieu of using the classroom cameras, groups film using personal flip video cameras, iPhone, Droid, digital compact cameras, and family owned camcorders. Most groups film using video, however, some groups chose to use stop action. In the teacher-student debriefings at the end, several students said they would have used stop action instead, and visa versa.

Once the filming is complete, students upload the pictures and video to a computer (iMac or PC) and begin editing. Most students use iMovie or Movie Maker 2.6, but others chose unique paths, like Photo Story with a voice over. The group that filmed using the Droid, needed to download the Droid editing software to the classroom PC before moving the video into Movie Maker 2.6. In the case of the Droid group and the Photo Story group, the QuickTime files needed to be converted to .WMV or .AVI files using Any Video Converter.



In the end, each successfully filmed scene enactment, is uploaded to SchoolTube. The videos are open to the public for rating and commenting, however, comments are not open ended in SchoolTube. Viewers must select from a drop down menu of options for comments. Please take a few minutes to view the Q-Tube channel on SchoolTube and comment on these videos.

Some of the videos did not upload directly to SchoolTube, so they were sent to YouTube then imported to SchoolTube. In the process of posting the videos for a global audience, I noticed there are a lot of English teachers out there with similar projects. I feel very good about this project and plan to write about the many successes in my next post. I would love to hear from teachers, who have taught similar projects, so the students in Room 106 can have an even greater learning experience.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi Mr. Orr- I really liked what I saw on your site/blog? However, I could not view the Room 106 School Tube channel- I was told I did not have permission to view.
Any suggestions?
IN the meantime, thank you for sharing the other video clips and info that I could access!
Mrs. Nolte

Mr. Orr said...

Mrs. Nolte,
Everything should be up and working. Have you had a chance to retry the links?
Mr. Orr