Doodle The News VS. Cazenovia High School: Finding A Value Proposition
DISCLAIMER: The following article was written on March 15th 2018, the day I presented to Cazenovia High School in NY.
The Newhouse Media & Education program is without a doubt the best major for a master’s student (in my humble opinion). This one-year journey in graduate school has put me on course to meeting tons of great people while innovating in the space of multimedia. As I continue to build Doodle the News, my capstone/startup, I have found myself influencing younger generations with my mission to shine light on global issues that deserve more attention.
Today, I found myself facing an exciting challenge in regards to engaging more people in my target audience with Doodle the News. With the help of Professor Jason Webb, I was able to hold my very first digital media literacy workshop, and I would consider my efforts an overall success.
I began with introducing myself and delving into why I was visiting. I was in front of 50+ students and 4 teachers to:
1) Help students build their professional portfolios in multimedia, social/sustainable entrepreneurship, and/or journalism.
2) Help students find their intrinsic interests tied to current events.
3) Learn from the students, as I know some of them will become young global leaders.
Once students became more comfortable with me, I introduced them to the 17 Sustainable Development Goals, the underlying principles that help guide what topics are chosen to be covered on Doodle the News. Although the United Nations tried their best organizing these issues into something everyone can understand, I went ahead and tried to make it even simpler.
It was at this point where students were broken up into groups of four. Fortunately, the teachers who helped me facilitate this presentation created a list of students who would work best together, ensuring no groups had an excess amount of slackers.
The activity we went through together was terrific! You can learn more about what I go through in a workshop in a previous article of mine, but students had fun and even gave an attempt at drawing some newdles!
Most students were very receptive of my message and showed their intrinsic interests almost immediately. All it took was me giving them little nudges in the right direction.
However, one student in particular was not having any of my jazz. No matter how much I tried to help her, she always came off as timid and reluctant to follow through with the activity. At the end of the session when I was handing out Doodle the News flyers, she was the only one to deny my half sheet! 😅
Professor Webb even managed to observe a few striking instances I should take note of. For instance, certain groups were not happy with their predetermined team members, so the newdle making process may have been impeded. Additionally, when the teachers helped clarify instructions I gave students for the activity, some students visually appeared to look annoyed. Although the teacher’s help redirecting the class was very beneficial to me as the presenter, it may have turned off a few kids who just wanted a break from their normal instructor.
Overall, I felt great leaving Cazenovia High School today after my media literacy workshop. As an entrepreneur, sometimes you have to try new things that may flip your business model on top of its own head. In doing so, I think I finally found more evidence of a value proposition Doodle the News offers: an engaging, fun, and interactive tool to help people become more media literate in today’s fast-paced news environment.
As a visionary, I can’t wait until the day Doodle the News offers customized curriculum-building in all facets of education, whether it’s through schools and institutions or parents who home-school their children.