Teaching To The Test Pattern

Teaching To The Test Pattern

Teaching to the Test Pattern is a podcast for video production teachers. Listeners can expect to hear about new technology and best practices from industry professionals.

  1. Jun 10

    EP 137: Jamey Trask From Fayette County High School (GA)

    He coaches a two-time state champion broadcast team that just finished eighth in the nation... and his big secret isn't a drill or a piece of gear. It's that he refuses to hand out an easy grade. Jamey Trask from Fayette County High School sat down with Tom at the Georgia ACTE conference to talk about what it actually takes to build students who can write and stack a live show in 90 minutes. They get into the brutal math of the SkillsUSA Video News Production contest, the moment a grade stops mattering, and why the kids who get told "this isn't good enough, go fix it" end up thanking him for it. In this episode: - The SkillsUSA Video News Production contest broken down: 90 minutes, a stack of AP wire stories, one live take - Why "go back and redo it" builds more pride than any grade ever could - How 22 years in the room earns the kind of trust that lets a kid hear hard feedback - Turning daily announcements into a weekly show students actually want to watch - Putting the VidPod to work for student podcasts (video and all) - Teaching kids to interview: research first, then throw out your question list by question two - Using AI as a starting line, not a finish line If you run a broadcast or AV program and you have ever wondered whether holding the line on quality is worth the friction, this one is for you. New episodes of Teaching to the Test Pattern drop on StreamSemester.com. Subscribe so you never miss a conversation. StreamSemester.com.

    15 min
  2. Jun 3

    EP 136: Billy Dunn from Albertville High School

    He outproduced NASA. Seven cameras to their four at the Huntsville Space and Rocket Center. And at the end of the year, he sat down and told me he didn't think he grew.This conversation with Billy Dunn from Albertville Innovation Academy is one of the most honest things we've put on this podcast. Billy came from Fox 6 in Birmingham — gold standard broadcast — walked into a classroom, and is now three years in, running five jumbotrons across five sports, building a state-level AV teacher conference from scratch, and wondering if he's doing it right. The answer might surprise you.In this episode:- Why imposter syndrome in year three looks nothing like year one — and why that matters- What happened when Billy got a football jumbotron at 2pm for a 7pm game- How a student went from "how long does this have to be?" to defending a one-second strobe effect as her creative call- The Alabama AV Teachers Boot Camp — born from one honest admission: "I don't know what I'm doing. Let's have a conference."- Why Billy stopped asking when to teach frame rates — and what he's teaching instead- The HERC project and how covering a NASA moon buggy competition gave his students a real beat to workIf you're a few years into AV teaching and you're winning things while still feeling like you're losing, this one's for you.Teaching to the Test Pattern is a StreamSemester.com production. Subscribe so you don't miss the next episode, and head to StreamSemester.com for more resources built for AV and broadcast educators.

    30 min
  3. May 21

    EP 133: Dean David Marshall from Savannah State University

    The dean of a nationally accredited college journalism program just told me he isn't sure his faculty is teaching some of his students anything they don't already know. Tom sits down with David Marshall, Dean of the College of Media Arts and Communications at Savannah State University - the oldest public HBCU in Georgia - and the conversation goes to places most deans won't go. Three studentsfailed the senior capstone this semester. His first question wasn't about them. It was about what his program missed. That kind of accountability, from the top, is worth the full hour. In this episode: Why PowerPoints are dead in Whiting Hall — and what replaced themThe senior capstone class that has exactly one grade (an A) and industryjudges in the roomWhat digital-native students already know when they walk in the door, and the one thing they're missingThe $1.2 million investment in new technology — and why it was spent in two weeksHow the VidPod ended up in the JMC podcast center (and the dean's honest take on his early skepticism)What a "culture of care" actually looks like when it also includes a kick in the pants If you teach, advise, or send students toward careers in media and communications — this one reframes what the accountability conversation is supposed to sound like. Teaching to the Test Pattern is a StreamSemester.com production. Subscribe for new episodes featuring teachers, industry leaders, and the stories between the two.

    38 min
5
out of 5
7 Ratings

About

Teaching to the Test Pattern is a podcast for video production teachers. Listeners can expect to hear about new technology and best practices from industry professionals.

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