OCMC: Making Interdisciplinary Learning More Accessible
February 4, 2015
Lisa Gulasy
Associate Professor of Biology Taylor Allen has always challenged students in his physiology course to think beyond the textbook. Since 2006, he has taken his students to the to reflect on evidence of bodily manifestation of emotions in art and literature. He would then ask his students to express what they鈥檇 learned in some creative fashion, usually through short narratives or drawings.
鈥淥bies seem to like a multidisciplinary approach,鈥 Allen says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really a testament to their diverse skills, talents, and interests.鈥
For the fall 2014 semester, Allen wanted to take this interdisciplinary approach to the next level, having his students create and present videos that would convey a thesis regarding the bodily experience of emotions. 鈥淚 had seen Shigehisa Kuriyama at Harvard show some videos his students had made for one of his classes and was really impressed with how the students were able to, in this particular case, draw on cultural artifacts and embed them within a video to convey a thesis,鈥 Allen says. 鈥淚 thought that would be a unique way to get my students to formulate a thesis and to draw support for that thesis using visual arts.鈥
The only problem was Allen knew little about video production. Not wanting to assign his students a project without providing them with the proper understanding and support, Allen knew where he could turn: the 麻豆视频 College Media Center (OCMC).
麻豆视频鈥檚 On-Campus Media Hub
Housed in Mudd Library, OCMC is 麻豆视频鈥檚 first creative media literacy, collaboration, and experimentation hub. OCMC launched in 2013 under the guidance of the 麻豆视频 Center for Technologically Enhanced Teaching (OCTET).
OCMC is headed by Julie Cruse, who designed and launched OCMC after a decade of creating programs that mix arts and technology and promote interdisciplinary learning. 鈥淲e were lucky to get someone with a skill set and background like Julie鈥檚,鈥 says Albert Borroni, director of OCTET. 鈥淗er involvement a testament to the caliber of people who come to work at 麻豆视频, and her hard work and unwavering dedication has helped mold OCMC into the successful resource hub it is today.鈥
At OCMC, student staff, known as media associates, provide workshops, playshops, drop-in lab assistance, and course support to help integrate arts and technology across curriculum, organizations, and independent projects. Or as media associate and senior cinema studies major Gabriel Maxwell Freed says, OCMC is like the Writing Center, but instead of providing assistance with the writing process, OCMC is 鈥渇ocused on media production and media creation.鈥
Workshops, delivered by media associates, last roughly one hour and are open to any student or faculty member to learn more about hardware or software (such as digital cameras or Adobe Creative Suite) or skill (such as how to best plan lighting for a photo or video shoot). Playshops are inquiry-led sessions that encourage hands-on experimental play in live spaces for discovery-based learning. 鈥淲e set up some cool equipment, interfaces, and exploration frameworks as optional avenues to getting familiar with these materials on your own terms, but it鈥檚 all choose-your-own adventure!鈥 reads the OCMC website. Past playshops have included sessions on the kinect, leap motion, installing multimedia art, and more.
OCMC has produced roughly 130 workshops, playshops, and educational installations since its launch in spring 2013. For the first time in fall 2014, Cruse and the media associates led course-related workshops created specifically for seven faculty members鈥 class projects. Freed led two such workshops: one for an introduction to cinema course taught by Burke Hilsabeck, visiting assistant professor of cinema studies, and one for Taylor Allen鈥檚 physiology course.
鈥淕abe had the very important role of introducing the students to the software and ensuring they didn鈥檛 get frustrated and abandon the project because of technical difficulties,鈥 Allen says of the workshop. 鈥淗e had a class period where he took the students through a project where they captured some images and assembled them into a video. The students created a brief video with him, and then a week later, they submitted a 15-second video they had created [as the first stage of their projects].鈥
Freed says his workshop also covered how students should organize their files and save their projects so as not to lose any of the work they were doing. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of misinformation that floods the Internet surrounding things like how you export a video,鈥 Freed says. 鈥淓very time you Google 鈥楬ow do I export this file for the Internet?鈥 half of the pages are wrong because people are talking about things they don鈥檛 understand. It鈥檚 really helpful to have a person who knows what they鈥檙e talking about and can explain the concepts.鈥
OCMC has also helped make a number of unique individual student and faculty exhibitions possible. For example, media associate Matthew Omahan and former media associate Charlie Spears 鈥14 assisted Simone Baron 鈥14 with her which interactively translated her performance of Alexandre Scriabin鈥檚 fourth Sonato Op. 30 into light and color to create a multisensory experience for the audience. Throughout the performance, a Max patch translated variables (density, frequency, patterns, and dynamics of pitches) to bring to life the synthetic and visual details of Scriabin鈥檚 sonata.
Photographs of Baron鈥檚 and other exhibitions made possible with the help of OCMC, including 鈥溌槎故悠 Modernist Salon,鈥 presented by students in Visiting Assistant Professor of Russian Polina Dimova鈥檚 color of music course, and 鈥淪hifting Forms,鈥 Melissa Ewing鈥檚 鈥14 senior capstone exhibition, can be seen on the OCMC website. New media art performances and works currently being supported by OCMC media associates will be on display in Polina Dimova鈥檚 Synaesthesia Symposium in early March.
Getting Assistance from OCMC
Numerous students and faculty have been positively affected by OCMC in its three semesters, and according to Cruse, more people continue to take advantage of drop-in assistance and appointments and express interest in workshops and playshops every day.
鈥淲e鈥檙e very busy,鈥 Cruse says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 so much demand for this program, and we鈥檙e so young.鈥 But, according to Freed, the media associates are always available to answer questions and give one-on-one attention to any student or faculty member who seeks it.
鈥淗aving a general campus resource that is accessible to everyone is a very beneficial thing,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t can be daunting to find someone who will help you edit a video if you鈥檙e not in an editing class, for example. Everyone who works at OCMC wants to share their knowledge and help people put their projects together. Seeing more people use OCMC as a resource is something everyone who works there wants.鈥
Learn more about OCMC on its website or by dropping in to speak with media associates during Lab Hours Sunday through Thursday from 5 to 9 p.m., resuming Monday, February 9.