February 20, 2004 == MEDIA ADVISORY
Public communication, says Calvin professor of communication arts and sciences
Quentin Schultze, is a mess these days.
"Janet Jackson's recent publicity stunt during the Super Bowl is just one
example," he says. "What about the charges, pro and con, about Mel Gibson's
new film about the Crucifixion? Should people who haven't seen the film be
promoting or assailing it on talk shows? And what about the controversy over
the BBC's reporting about the British government's involvement in Iraq?"
Schultze says he hopes new Calvin Workshops in Media and Theatre can play a
small part in improving public communication. The program will sponsor a
variety of one-day and weeklong workshops led by excellent communicators
from the realms of media and stage.
"There are," says Schultze, "many workshop programs that offer budding
professionals a chance to learn communication skills, but few that address the
greater issues of quality, ethics and service. We aim to ask the toughest
questions: How can public communicators serve society, not just their own
organizations? What is the public interest? And what is truly good
communication?"
The new project will get off to a good start on April 26 when Calvin graduate
Jeff Veen hosts a one-day workshop called "Beyond Usability: Designing
Meaningful Web Experiences."
Veen, says Schultze, is an example of the kind of talented communicator the
Calvin Workshops in Media and Theatre hopes to bring to West Michigan on a
regular basis.
Veen launched HotWired.com in 1994 and then went on to become a founding
partner of Adaptive Path, a user-experience consulting company. He wrote a
book called "The Art & Science of Web Design" and is a columnist for Webmonkey.
He also has written for such publications such as Wired. In 1998, CNet named
him one of the "First Annual Web Innovators."
"Jeff Veen," says Schultze, "might be the top Web design consultant in the
country. His whole approach is to encourage organizations to serve Web users,
not to manipulate them. The fact that he is a Calvin graduate made him a
special person to invite for the premiere Calvin Workshops event."
The one-day workshop Veen will lead promises to be a good model for future
Workshops in Media and Theatre events. It will offer a broad perspective on
Web design, but also will equip workshop participants with design techniques
and a library of documentation templates that can be used right away.
In August Calvin will host another one-day workshop when Brad VanArragon leads
a session on "Managing Film and Television Productions for Studio and
Location." Van Arragon has worked in film and TV since graduating from Calvin
in the last decade with credits that include production manager for The Chris
Isaak Show on Showtime. And he is currently working on Edison, a feature film
with Morgan Freeman and Kevin Spacey that just added to its cast Justin
Timberlake, at the center of the recent Super Bowl controversy.
"Brad will undoubtedly have some recent, first-hand stories about making a
film in a media-charged context," says Schultze.
Weeklong workshops will take place this August on such topics as "Writing
Compelling Television Series Drama," "Developing, Writing, Producing, Directing
and Submitting a Short Film/Video for Festivals," "Writing and Producing Radio
Documentaries," "Producing TV News that Serves and Engages Viewers," and
"Creative Process and Principles for Multimedia in Worship."
Says Schultze: "When I arrived at Calvin in 1982 I imagined the college as a
possible center for the study of communication ethics. The first media course
we added to the curriculum when we formed the department of communication arts
and sciences in 1984 was ethics. Ironically, that's the course that's missing
in most communications programs across North America. The workshops are the
logical extension of our mission to serve society by nurturing students of all
ages. The CAS faculty has been talking about this for at least ten years. We
educators can complain about the state of public communication or we can try to
improve it. The Workshops are a place for people to learn together how to be
better communicators."
The Workshops have developed and adopted a three-part tag line to express
their mission: gratitude, excellence and integrity. "We will encourage
professionals to communicate gratefully, excellently and with integrity," says
Schultze. "I like St. Paul's phrase, 'a more excellent way.'"
For more see http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/workshops/
-end-
Received on Fri Feb 20 13:54:53 2004
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