After successful completion of the course, students are able to...
This course is designed to introduce you to the fundamental theories and practical skills needed to better prepare you for your multimedia productions during your studies and later in your private and professional projects.
Upon completion of this course, students will have the skills necessary to not only create engaging, single-camera video productions that can be applied to various types of projects, but will also acquire skills for recording better audio in the field, audio editing and mixing.
This is a practical course, which means you'll learn mostly by doing. You'll explore both video and audio production through multiple projects. For a more concentrated exploration of both mediums, the audio projects will focus on dialog editing and mixing, and the video projects will focus on composition and storytelling.
ECTS Breakdown (6 ECTS = 150 hours):
Lectures & Pre-Lecture (15 hours)
Projects (120 hours)
Quizzes (5 hours)
Organization (10 hours)
Communication & Resources
Additional communication and information will be conducted via Slack.
All slides and supplementary readings will be accessible via TUWEL.
If you have a general question or problem, please use the appropriate channel in Slack. Someone else may have the same question or problem.
Literature - References
Modern Recording Techniques, 9th Edition by David Miles Huber
Producing Great Sound for Film and Video: Expert Tips from Preproduction to Final Mix by Jay Rose
Audio Postproduction for Film and Video: After-the-Shoot solutions, Professional Techniques, and Cookbook Recipes to Make Your Project Sound Better, by Jay Rose
Audio in Media, 10th Edition by Stanley Alten
Motion Picture and Video Lighting by Blain Brown
Filmmaker’s Handbook by Steven Ascher
Video Production Handbook by Jim Owens
All projects will be created in groups of three, while quizzes will be done individually. All project information will be covered in the lecture, in TUWEL, and on Slack.
Please note, if you hand in at least one project or quiz, you will be considered fully registered for the course and will be given a certificate at the end of the semester. If you choose not to partake in the course after you have handed in the first project, you must notify the course leaders before the end of the semester.
There will be no written exam.