- Location
- Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
- Bio
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I realize that I am a people-person, a creative person, a curious person, a bit of a shit-disturber and a champion of open debate/conversation. I want to keep making impressions: in mediums, on people and with organizations. I want to tell stories and find ways to capture people’s attention enough to establish connections and maintain relationships.
- Portals
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Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
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Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
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- Categories
- Graphic design Communications Community engagement Media Visual arts
Skills
Socials
Achievements
Latest feedback
Team feedback
Team feedback
Team feedback
Recent projects
Level Up: CineWorlding Website
Positions available: 3 CineWorlding is a newly developing digital cinema production method for educational film. While traditional educational approaches to film have relied strictly on documentary media, cineworlding inverts this method and asks educators and students to be producers of their own films. Through the production process students and educators learn how to make their own educational resources centering the lives of students and the future of their community as the curriculum. A series of free tutorials have been produced at MacEwan University and the next step is to create a website to house and expand these tutorials. This project, therefore, will design a website that will: 1. Establish a virtual home for CineWorlding tutorial videos; 2. Provide extra how-to content that goes into more detail for some of the technical aspects of digital cinema production; 3. Provide a bibliography for teachers and program designers so that they can communicate the importance of CineWorlding to school administrators and funding bodies; 4. Provide a collection of essays and links to books about CineWorlding; 5. Provide examples of CineWorlding films; 6. Provide access to the CineWorlding film festival. Teachers and students increasingly recognize the opportunities that digital media affords. Students engage in digital media, through social media, as a regular part of their lives. Teachers are often frustrated with the amount of time students are engrossed in social media and too often see technology as an enemy of learning. This is due, in part, to the way technology and technological production has been framed in western philosophy, and the narratives of technological utopianism and technological determinism that have resulted. Technological utopianism is the belief that technological innovation only brings along positive outcomes and that society, and the planet, will be saved by technology. Technological determinism, takes an opposite view, seeing technology, and especially entertainment media, as generally negative. Recently, Bernard Stiegler has argued that technology needs to be viewed differently, as central to what it means to be human. CineWorlding is developed on this new view and is building a media pedagogy that will provide students with an opportunity to see that digital media technology has both positive and negative components and that schooling that seeks to understand media technology will help students prepare for their futures with a balanced view of what media technology introduces in society. To get there requires a digital media pedagogy, and therefore CineWorlding. The project will develop in three individual stages with a shared fourth stage: website design content writing social media development editing (all team members contribute) Communications students will be hired to design and populate an interactive website that will lead students and teachers through the processes of digital cinema production. By the end of the 18 30 minute instructional videos, students and teachers will be well-positioned to make and share their own educational films, will have, through this experience, come face to face with the opportunities and challenges of digital cinema production and will be able to critically evaluate the media that they experience. It is my belief that critical capacity comes as the result of producing media, not from abstract analysis of media.
Level UP: Earth Common Journal - Volume 8 (Phase 1)
Earth Common Journal is creating, developing, and publishing its Volume 8, Issue 1 - "Adapt" (2022). Earth Common Journal ( ECJ ) is an international undergraduate peer-reviewed journal that provides a forum where students communicate a diversity of ideas and information on issues concerning conservation, sustainability, and climate adaptation. ECJ is published by the MacEwan University Bachelor of Communication Studies program. It is published annually each fall, with its inaugural issue released in 2011. The journal accepts articles from all disciplines, and includes research projects that are empirical, qualitative, creative, and interdisciplinary in content and approach. It also accepts articles from students internationally, to provide global perspectives and discussions on conservation, sustainability, and climate adaptation. Students in the disciplines of communication, journalism, editing, media, public relations,and writing are being sought to create this issue.
Level UP: Earth Common Journal - Volume 8 (Phase II)
Earth Common Journal is creating, developing, and publishing its Volume 8, Issue 1 - "Adapt" (2022). Earth Common Journal ( ECJ ) is an international undergraduate peer-reviewed journal that provides a forum where students communicate a diversity of ideas and information on issues concerning conservation, sustainability, and climate adaptation. ECJ is published by the MacEwan University Bachelor of Communication Studies program. It is published annually each fall, with its inaugural issue released in 2011. The journal accepts articles from all disciplines, and includes research projects that are empirical, qualitative, creative, and interdisciplinary in content and approach. It also accepts articles from students internationally, to provide global perspectives and discussions on conservation, sustainability, and climate adaptation. Students in the disciplines of communication, journalism, editing, media, public relations,and writing are being sought to create this issue.
Level UP: Earth Common Journal - Volume 8 (Phase III)
Earth Common Journal is creating, developing, and publishing its Volume 8, Issue 1 - "Adapt" (2022). Earth Common Journal ( ECJ ) is an international undergraduate peer-reviewed journal that provides a forum where students communicate a diversity of ideas and information on issues concerning conservation, sustainability, and climate adaptation. ECJ is published by the MacEwan University Bachelor of Communication Studies program. It is published annually each fall, with its inaugural issue released in 2011. The journal accepts articles from all disciplines, and includes research projects that are empirical, qualitative, creative, and interdisciplinary in content and approach. It also accepts articles from students internationally, to provide global perspectives and discussions on conservation, sustainability, and climate adaptation. Students in the disciplines of communication, journalism, editing, media, public relations,and writing are being sought to create this issue.
Work experience
Managing Editor
Earth Common Journal
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
September 2021 - Current
www.earthcommonjournal.com
Creative Director
Earth Common Journal
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
September 2021 - Current
www.earthcommonjournal.com
Web Designer
Cineworlding
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
April 2021 - August 2021
www.Cineworlding.com
Education
Bachelor of Communications, Professional Communications
MacEwan University
August 2016 - Current
Personal projects
Give me a Break (Digital Story)
July 2020 - July 2020
"Give me a Break" is a digital story by Jacqueline Ohm. In 2008, Jacqueline was hit by a car while crossing the busy intersection of Cambie Street and King Edward Drive in Vancouver, Canada. Having no memory of being hit, she details the moments leading up to the collision and the disorientated thoughts afterwards.
Believed to be one of the pivotal moments in her life, “Give me a Break” is a story of transition and surrender: to pain, to body, to the limitations and creativity in our lives in which we can never predict. When we ask for breaks what do we receive?
Illustrations, editing, narration and music by Jacqueline Ohm
The Digital Story Experience: Commitment (Episode 7)
July 2020 - July 2020
Time stamp: 12:12
Season 2 of a staycast made by university students during Covid-19 lockdowns. Interviewers gather stories around a universal theme. #alonetogether #storiesinplace
Kelsey Lusis, Emma Hansen, Janette Urbonas and Jacqueline Ohm gather stories about commitment to work, school, marriage and other relationships. From standing by the Oilers to battling chronic disease to devoting a professional life to the culinary arts, thank you Marshall Whitehead, Olivia Wik, Kasyn & Filliep Lament for your stories.
The Digital Story Experience: Childhood (Episode 6)
July 2020 - July 2020
Timestamp: 10:40
Season 2 of a staycast made by university students during Covid-19 lockdowns. Interviewers gather stories around a universal theme. #alonetogether #storiesinplace
In this episode Madison Lusis, Jacqueline Ohm, Sofiya Timoschenko and Marlene Wurfel gather stories in place on the topic of childhood. Does childhood begin and end? What remains as childhood is remembered? Thank you Agnes Wurfel, Savannah Schultz, Dallon Frunchak and Kelsey Lusis.