|







1460
Craig Rd.
St.. Louis, MO 63146
314-872-8282
1-800-835-8282
314-872-9128 (fax)
csd.org
Movie
Archives
2008 winners
2007 winners
2006 winners
2005 winners
2004 winners
Teacher
Checklist
(Teachers:
use this to make sure you are submitting all the necessary forms.)
|
Check out the 2009 winners!
Cooperating
School Districts of Greater St. Louis and Tech4Learning
present
Show-Me
a Movie 2010
Digital Storytelling Contest for Missouri Students
(please
review carefully)
Show-Me
a Movie is a digital storytelling contest for Missouri students to demonstrate
their creativity and digital moviemaking skills. Based on curriculum and
with a content focus, the videos will showcase what students know, care
about, and are able to do. Join us in this fun event!
Prizes and
Judging
Cash prizes will be
awarded to the different divisions of each category. In addition, judges
may choose a movie or movies for special recognition. Checks will be made
out to the winning schools. The judges reserve the right to switch movies
into categories they deem appropriate if they feel the movies do not belong
in the categories they were originally entered in.
Movie
Length
Movies may have a running time of no more than
2 minutes, excluding title and credits. Movies that do not
adhere to this rule may be disqualified.
Contest
Timeline
- December
13, 2010 Contest Deadline: Entries must be received no later than 5
p.m. Entries received after this deadline will not be considered. Mailed
entries must be addressed to:
Show-Me a Movie
Cooperating School Districts
1460 Craig Rd.
St. Louis, MO 63146
- Do NOT email movies, as files can become corrupted, and/or they may clog up the server. Instead, burn movies to a CD and mail in.
- February 15, 2011 Grand prizewinners and category/grade level winners showcased
at the Midwest Education Technology Conference at the St. Charles Convention
Center.
Divisions
- Elementary:
Grades 2 - 5
- Middle:
Grades 6 - 8
- High:
Grades 9 - 12
Categories
- Show
Me Something New: Make an instructional or how-to movie.
- Show
Me a Story: Tell a story about someone special, your school, your
community.
- Show
Me a Challenge: Share local environmental concerns and social issues,
which promote awareness and public action.
- Show
Me Your Community: Recount an aspect of your community/ethnic culture
that is unique, significant, promotes a message, and advances a better
understanding of it.
Rubric
The Show Me a Movie
Contest Rubric is the criteria or
the measure by which performance will be rated. For Show Me a Movie, the
judges will rate 5 as the highest possible points attainable in each of
the categories. Each video will be judged in five categories:
1. Content
2. Creativity
3. Storyboarding
4. Videography for Live Action or Videography for Animation
5. Reflection
Student
Checklist and Reflection Sheet
The student(s) upon the completion of the project will complete a checklist
and reflection sheet. These forms represent the students' assessment of
their completed video, and these forms will be additional criteria the
judges will use to determine if the students understood and met all the
criteria of making a video. (Please see the Show
Me A Movie Student Checklist and the Show
Me Standards Reflection Sheet.) Each student must complete his/her
own reflection sheet. The group of students submitting a movie cannot
submit just one reflection. Each reflection will be scored, and an average
will be taken of the group's reflections for this portion of the scoring
guide. Maximum length for all questions on the reflection sheet is 200
words.
Storyboard
A storyboard is required and will be judged. There is no set form.
However, students should submit some type of storyboard showing how they
planned their Show-Me a Movie entry. Only one storyboard is required for
each movie. Here is a sample storyboard.
Summary
of Movie
Each student movie maker or group of movie makers must also submit a short
Movie Summary Sheet
of what their movie is about, including the point of the movie, the purpose
of the movie, and any background knowledge that the viewer must have in
order to understand the movie. This can be very brief--2 to 3 sentences.
It will not be scored, but will be used by the judges to help clarify
if necessary.
Teacher
Checklist
Each teacher will be required to fill out and submit a Teacher
Checklist so that he/she can make sure all items have been properly
submitted. In addtion, teachers will submit a brief statement about their
involvement in the movie making process with an estimate of time spent
on their part.
Sponsored
by:
|