Imagine the effect of having children organize and present their ideas to a
room full of adults using animation, digital photography, vidoes,
Web pages or other techniques we are used to seeing from professionals.
In more ways than one, multimedia skills give kids a leg up in communicating
their ideas.
The multimedia lesson ideas available on YouthLearn include those that focus on building skills in:
- drawing, such as the lesson Mirror Drawing,
- graphics and image editing, such as the lesson What's
the Weather,
- animation, such as the ideas in Teaching
Simple Animation,
- photography, such as the lesson Zany Zoom Ins,
- videos and presentations, such as the project You
Oughta Be in Pictures, and
- using the Internet and the Web, such as the lesson Going
on a Surfing Safari.
For a list of all of the multimedia lessons, see the sidebar on
the right. You'll also want to take a look at the articles on teaching visual arts and teaching media literacy.
What is Multimedia?
The term "multimedia" generally is associated with computers and videos, but it simply refers to a project created using more than one expressive form (or medium). A collage in which you have kids outline their bodies on a long sheet of paper, and then have them write, draw, paint and paste objects and photos on the outline to express who they are, is a multimedia project. A movie is multimedia because it has both pictures and sound.
With the introduction of the personal computer, the tools of multimedia have been put into many more people's hands. Many simple, intuitive and inexpensive software programs are now available that allow even children to combine words, pictures, sounds, animation and video into much more persuasive, powerful and empowering communications vehicles. With the Internet becoming so pervasive, they can now publish and share their work with millions of people around the world.
The new technologies don't replace traditional media, however:
They simply provide more options. As an instructor in a technology
learning center, you'll want to teach as many of these important
new skills as you can. But don't forget that you also have to teach
that visual communication is still a part of human communication.
The first decision every communicator has to make is what medium
is most appropriate to the message. Many times, it will not involve
computers.