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Digital Media Studies Cedarville University: From Multimedia to Interactive Media Program Goals • Overarching question: What difference does it make to be a media practitioner who is a Christian? • Anticipate trends to prepare students for environment they will face • Balance between hands-on training and theoretical foundation • Work in projects for real clients Brief History • Radio Broadcasting program started in 1971 • By 1977 Cedarville had concentrations in – Radio Production – Journalism – Sales/Management Brief History • Video Media Production concentration added in 1983 – Need for computer graphics and CG – “Bread & Butter” accounts in corporate training • By mid-80s students working in computer graphics & interactive programming Brief History • In 1989-90 identified trend toward “multimedia” • 1991 – Developed Multimedia major • 1992 – Dropped Journalism concentration to add Multimedia major Multimedia Major • Key experience with client in yearlong Preproduction -> Graphic Design -> Authoring sequence • Built anticipating videodisc and CDbased delivery • Focus on screen design & authoring programs Challenges to Program • Rapid changes difficult to accommodate within academic bureaucracy • Increased competition – Technical & Professional Writing – Graphic Design Time to re-think & re-tool • FCC’s HDTV -> ATV -> DTV rulemaking triggered re-thinking • By late 1990s had mature Multimedia program that needed to be re-tooled Factors suggesting change • Changing trajectory of Multimedia from CD-based to Web-based • Not all areas had developed as anticipated (e.g., Music entrepreneur) • Changes as broadcast media move to digital formats • Convergence (technical & regulatory) that blurred boundaries between media Change to Semesters • 2001 – Change to Semesters announced • 2001-2002 – Team worked on reconceptualization of majors Challenges - Trends • Anticipate trends to prepare students for environment they will face – Did division between broadcasting and “new” media still make sense? – How did our eight+ years of experience with multimedia help us anticipate where broadcasting is headed? Challenges - Balance • Balance between hands-on training and theoretical foundation – Keeping up with software releases was killing us – Workload getting out of balance because of time spent on development of hands-on training Challenges - Students • Changes in incoming students – 1993 – What’s Multimedia? – 1999 – Students running Web design businesses Challenges - Integration • What difference does it make to be a media practitioner who is a Christian? – Opportunity to create courses that deal with this question more intentionally New Electronic Media Majors • Electronic Media Major with four concentrations, including Interactive Media • Trying to prepare all majors for flexibility to anticipate and move into new opportunities New Electronic Media Majors • New common core (27 hours) – Most courses deal with “old,” “new” and “emerging” media – Christian Approaches to Electronic Media deals with integration question Interactive Media Concentration • Rationale for 0 credit proficiencies • Work with clients shifted from yearlong class sequence to Practica after proficiencies have been met Graduates • Author of Microsoft Press books on DHMTL & XML • Head of media production for missions agency • Several Media ministers (including one of the first in the country) • Many working with media production houses • Some with software design companies Facilities Tyler Digital Communications Center Facilities – Tyler Multimedia Lab Facilities – Tyler Multimedia Lab Lab - 16 x 9 Screen Lab - Presentation Station NLE Editing Suites NLE #1 – Panasonic Postbox NLE #3 – Macintosh G4/Final Cut Pro NLE #3 – Macintosh G4/Final Cut Pro