Mix it up: Jocko Mixing Booth gives students a voice
Brandon Hansen | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 13 years, 7 months AGO
ARLEE — The Arlee Warriors blazed their way through the state
tournament this year and they’re also blazing a trail in multimedia
with the new Jocko Mixing Booth.
ARLEE — The Arlee Warriors blazed their
way through the state tournament this year and they’re also blazing
a trail in multimedia with the new Jocko Mixing Booth.
Arlee teacher, Anna Baldwin came up
with the idea for the high-tech mixing booth after using audio
elements in her class assignments.
“I wanted to try news things and
podcasts seemed like an easy and applicable thing to try,” Baldwin
said. “I had a little cheap microphone in the classroom but it was
awkward and it didn’t work very well.”
Baldwin thought that it might work
better if the students had their own space to work, such as a
recording booth. That way, the students weren’t recording projects
in the midst of a chaotic classroom.
She wanted to have kids work on
NPR-like news stories, book reviews, public service announcements,
radio shows, audio slideshows, and she wanted the students to have
a workspace for it. That’s when Arlee technology specialist
Michelle Wieler suggested applying for a grant through the Plum
Creek Foundation.
“I thought that it would be great for
it to have its own separate location,” Baldwin said.
Plum Creek is the largest private
landowner in the country. It manages timberlands with sustainable
forestry practices and sells timber products to customers
throughout the United States. The Plum Creek Foundation was founded
to improve the quality of life in communities where the company’s
employees live and work, and it provided almost $800,000 to
communities around the country in 2009.
Baldwin proposed that the Jocko Mixing
Booth would allow “the development of listening, speaking, reading
and writing skills, as well as the nurturing of creative logical
and critical thinking and effective media use.” She went on to
state that the Jocko Mixing Booth would become a regular part of
curriculum in her class.
Baldwin asked for $2,235 in grant money
for the recording booth equipment, that included a recording
computer, a recording/podcasting pack, headphones, a portable
recorder, software, seating in the booth and an iTunes account for
background music in the projects.
After applying in June, Baldwin
received the grant in August and had the booth set up by the end of
October.
There was plenty of work to be done as
the computer had to be built, the equipment had to be ordered and
the booth needed a home. Baldwin found the perfect home for her new
endeavor next door to her classroom, in the book closet. With the
insulating cinder blocks, she found that the closet was
exceptionally good at keeping the sound out.
Then, came the most important part: the
on-air sign.
Baldwin asked her stepfather Michael
Malloch if he could come up with one.
“He couldn’t find one so he decided to
build one,” she said. “I know he enjoys projects like that.”
Using donated plexi-glass, Malloch
crafted an LED on-air sign that now alerts outsiders that recording
is in progress inside the booth.
With the booth complete, students in
Baldwin’s classes (and the entire school) can use it for various
audio projects.
Baldwin’s students have done
interviews, investigative audio stories, audio slide shows and
op-ed pieces on how they think the media handled Hurricane Katrina.
She also had students take a look at old Montana history books.
“It was full of misinformation and
stunning statements,” Baldwin said.
She had the students voice their
opinions and talk about how they would revise the textbooks.
Baldwin also plans to have them work on
a social action project where students will lay out a solution for
a problem faced by our society. In all, she has created another
avenue for students to express themselves in the digital era.
“It’s an authentic product that is a
representation of their beliefs, thoughts and ideas,” Baldwin
said.
Unlike an assignment where students are
expected to give a certain answer in a certain way, the Jocko
Mixing Booth allows the students to voice their opinions through
thought-provoking dialogue.
Baldwin, who is also the advisor for
the Arlee student newspaper, The Jocko, now has another form of
media that her students can use in the classroom.
And like a Kasey Bridgewater
three-pointer, this mixing booth is most certainly on target.