It is a rite of passage for early May each year as the students in my Multiplatform Design & Storytelling course at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism turn in their final projects.
The assignment varies each semester, but it usually involves a multimedia story that the students write, design and promote themselves.
I will be profiling the work of the 13 students in my class, with their permission, and hope you will feel free to comment and to contact the students if you would like to discuss their story, or even offer job possibilities. They are receiving their Masters in Journalism from Columbia in the next few days.
The project’s goal
Final: A multimedia story
Here is how I presented the final project in our course syllabus.
It’s been years since The New York Times published “Snow Fall: The Avalanche at Tunnel Creek.” It instantly became a storytelling sensation. More than that, it pioneered the multimedia story for the digital age. What is it that the best multimedia stories have in common? All emphasize segmentation. All introduce texture woven into the narrative with photo galleries, quotes, videos and highlights. All allow readers to explore related content.
For the final project, each student will create his or her own story and present it in a multimedia mode, appealing to the senses through audio, video, photography and text. This final project will become a valuable portfolio piece, while demonstrating your ability to tell stories across platforms.
The presentation must include the following:
Each day I will profile about three projects.
Project 11
Headline: The New York City Sanctuary Movement Finds Alliance with Churches
Author: Natalie Cardenas (maa2300@columbia.edu)
Highlight: The New York City sanctuary movement continues to grow amidst arrest of immigration activists. One undocumented mother becomes the second person in NYC to publicly seek refuge at a place of worship.
Project 12
Headline: When modernism, traditionalism clash: women’s struggle in modern Orthodox.
Author: Gailie Darwich (gd2495@columbia.edu)
Highlight: Is there a religious schism ahead? Orthodox women struggle to be modern while keeping Judaism’s traditional gender roles. Hear what they have to say.
Links:
Project 13
Headline: Draft Masters: where the Pros go to get their NFL Draft News
Author: Brian Pascus (bpp2115@columbia.edu)
Highlight: Your complete guide to everything you want to know about the NFL Draft.
Desktop:
Project 14
Headline: Me in the Mirror
Author: Tiantian (Tiana) Dong (td2548@columbia.edu)
Highlight: Young Chinese open up about their body insecurities.
Links
Visual presentation: https://drive.google.com/open?
Mobile: https://marvelapp.com/
Columbia final projects, Spring 2018
https://www.garciamedia.com/blog/my-columbia-stud…rojects-part-one/
https://www.garciamedia.com/blog/my-columbia-students-final-projects-part-2/
https://www.garciamedia.com/blog/my-columbia-students-final-projects-part-three/
https://www.garciamedia.com/blog/my-columbia-students-final-projects-part-four/
June 7-8—WAN-IFRA World Congress, Lisbon, Portugal
June 12-14, CUE Days , Aarhus, Denmark
http://www.ccieurope.com/news/6738/Video_What_is_CUE_Days_2018
August 2, Digital House (Facebook workshop), Buenos Aires
October 6, 20, 27–King’s College, New York City
The Basics of Visual Journalism seminars