Unless otherwise indicated, written assignments should be typed in MLA format, then
submitted as hard copies. Substantiating paperwork (storyboards, lighting plots,
scripts, talent releases) tends to be rewarded with higher grades if presented
professionally (i.e., typed in easily-navigable folders or binders). Written work
submitted by e-mail should be formatted as .pdf (not MS-Word) files.
Raw footage must be submitted
on properly labeled miniDV cassettes. Improperly
labeled tapes will not be accepted. Really.
The majority of Video
Production coursework will take the form of practical performance and projects. If
you are not present in class when your name is called to undertake a task, your work will
be considered late. If your work is submitted incomplete or otherwise outside the
assignment's specified format parameters, it will be returned to you for correction.
Upon resubmission, it will be considered late work.
Late work can earn no more
than a maximum of 64 points. Work is considered late if it is submitted (or, in the case
of e-mail, time-stamped) after lecture begins on the due date. If, because of extreme and
prolonged sickness, you miss a deadline and are able to substantiate a claim of
incapacitation with a note from a reputable doctor or Calvin Health Services, the grades
of your remaining assignments will be given greater weight to compensate. Otherwise, you
will receive a zero for the assignment. Examinations must be taken when scheduled.
Quizzes may be given without
warning to encourage attendance and affirm content mastery throughout the term.
The grade for the course will
be based on the following:
| Projects |
|
50% |
| Class Participation |
|
25% |
| Quizzes & Assignments |
|
25% |
Assignment grades will be
based on the following scale:
| 96-100 |
|
A |
|
|
78-81 |
|
C |
| 94-95 |
|
A- |
|
75-77 |
|
C- |
| 91-93 |
|
B+ |
|
72-74 |
|
D+ |
| 88-90 |
|
B |
|
68-71 |
|
D |
| 85-87 |
|
B- |
|
65-67 |
|
D- |
| 82-84 |
|
C+ |
|
0-64 |
|
F |
|
Because there are no "right" and "wrong" answers in this field of
study, I am open to a certain amount of discussion with regard to the grade awarded any
given assignment. Appeals should be made in a timely fashion, within two class periods of
grade notification. Appeals should be made face to face (not by phone, in writing or by
e-mail) and offered with rhetorical and presentational clarity (After all, this is
a communication class). In the case of group projects, appeals should be made by the
director on behalf of the entire crew.
|
The current edition of the Calvin
College Student Conduct Code notes that "the student-faculty relationship is
based on trust and mutual respect which can be seriously undermined by the suspicion or
reality of academic dishonesty." It elsewhere defines plagiarism as "the
use, by paraphrase or direct quotation, of the published or unpublished work of another
person without full and clear acknowledgment."
Though expected to abide by
the document as a whole, Media Production students may benefit from specific awareness of
conduct proscribed by Article IV of the Code:
Cheating,
plagiarism, or other forms of academic dishonesty.
Unauthorized possession, duplication or use of
keys or other access devices to any College premises or unauthorized entry to or use of
College premises.
Use of computing facilities and resources in
violation of copyright laws.
The standards of honesty and
the penalties of dishonesty apply equally to words, ideas, visual images, auditory images,
and all electrochemical means of storage and communication.
I will vigorously pursue
prosecution of academic dishonesty to the very limit of sanctions allowed by the college
(Article V, Sections D and E), up to and including failure of the course and expulsion
from the college. I will just as vigorously work with student to prevent even
unintended lapses of integrity. If you are uncertain about how to avoid plagiarism
or other forms of academic dishonesty, please consult a member of the English faculty, the
most recent edition of The Little, Brown Handbook,or (preferably) ask me.
While student media producers retain
copyright ownership of their respective work, enrollment in this course constitutes your
permission to let Calvin College, the Communication Arts and Sciences Department, the
professor, their representatives, and successors, exhibit and distribute for promotional
purposes those media projects submitted in fulfillment of course assignments. You
may withhold or limit such permission by indicating your wish to do so in a note to your
professor signed, witnessed and dated before the courses drop date. |