LaGrange College’s Bachelor of Arts degree in Film & Media Arts develops students into independent, multi-hyphenate creators, and prepares them for entry level positions within the film, television, media, entertainment, and broadcast industries. The foundational curriculum provides students with a comprehensive proficiency in conventional and emerging film technology, theory, and practice. As students progress through the program, they receive personal faculty advisement to create a custom elective course progression, geared toward their specific area(s) of focus. In our tutorial-based, advanced F&MA courses, students are able to hone their voice and craft in the authorship of their own creative works.
The faculty in the Film & Media Arts program represent a diverse array of applied knowledge in both image and audio-based technologies, as well as relevant theoretical approaches. Our in-house production collective, West Side Productions, provides consistent experiential learning opportunities, where students can work alongside faculty and staff participating in production projects with campus and community partners, using industry standard equipment, facilities, and procedures. As a committed faculty of teaching artists, we strive to create a dynamic, collaborative, and multi-modal production environment in our West Side Production Facility, and truly embrace LaGrange College’s liberal arts tradition.
The program of Film & Media Arts
Upon completion of a degree in Film & Media Arts, the student should:
Sophomore Review—F&MA faculty will evaluate sophomore portfolios according to a standard rubric. Evaluation will include an assessment of students’ oral skills based on statements and critiques as well as an evaluation of creativity, self-expression and technical skills as evidenced in their body of work-in-progress.
Senior Exit Review—F&MA faculty (which may include an outside reviewer) will evaluate the short film, or alternative, faculty-approved, creative project, produced in the senior capstone course according to a rubric containing course objectives. Evaluation will include an assessment of students’ writing and oral skills based on statements and critiques as well as demonstrating growth in creativity, self-expression, and technical skills as evidenced in their body of work/record of technical application.
The LaGrange College West Side Film and Recording building includes a modern 150-seat recital hall, a suite of mixing and editing rooms, acoustically treated studios, spacious smart classrooms, dedicated ensemble rehearsal rooms and a live recording studio and control room. This facility also features video staging and shooting rooms with grid lighting, a Chroma key wall and a dedicated project workroom for stop-motion animation and detailed videography.
Major Minor
B.A. in Film and Media Arts Minor in Film and Media ArtsThis course will survey the cinema from the perspective of film history and theory, cinematic aesthetics, film industry and technology, and film production modes and genres. Emphasis will be placed on developing and refining active viewership skills and articulating thoughtful film analysis, as well an understanding of the development of film as a medium.
This foundational Film & Media Arts course provides a survey of the roles, departments, and processes in all phases of film and video production, and hands-on production experience, developing skills relevant to the creation of short films, art films, music videos, industrial and corporate presentations, video documentation, and basic digital media management.
(1-6 Hours) An opportunity for students to gain added early applied experience and insight in approved off-campus settings. Internships consist of at least 40 working hours per credit hour in areas related to the discipline. Assignments may include selected readings, public presentation, and a final portfolio containing essays, weekly journal, and supporting material. Advisors, program coordinators, department chairs, and the internship coordinator (or designee) must approve the internship before a student begins their work. Internships will be taken as pass/no credit.
This advanced Film & Media Arts course focuses on production and postproduction techniques for audio as used in film and video production, TV, and in various digital media. These techniques include sound design, Foley, SFX, NAT sound, A.D.R., music layback, environmental synthesis, and digital encoding.
This advanced Film & Media Arts course is designed to give the student a broad and functional appreciation of the cinematic image. Image capture techniques and practical applications of professional image production in the studio, as well as in the field, presented in a theoretical context, using industry standard equipment and facilities.
This advanced Film & Media Arts course is designed to introduce students to the fundamentals of writing for visual media. Students will concentrate on developing scripts for a variety of specific audiences and formats including film, television, online, advertising, and educational media.
This Production Project course will be taken in the senior year and will result in the completion and presentation of an independent work in the documentary mode. Students will also lead a collaborative documentary production team formed from the concurrently enrolled junior cohort of students, and may also include collaborators, production assistants, and talent from outside the enrolled class. Students will study, critically analyze, and lead class discussions on the documentary form.
A supervised, practical “real world” experience in a professional off-campus environment. May be repeated for credit. Course may be taken for 1-3 credits.
The Capstone course progression in Film & Media Arts is an intensive studio course in which students author a 4-10 minute short film within the modality of their choosing, or alternative, faculty approved creative work, and will result in a public screening of the final project from the enrolled student that will be accompanied by a production and written defense. In the first semester of Capstone, students will conduct the pre-production phase, including concept development, budgeting, casting and crewing, scheduling, and locking all scripted production elements and requisite equipment, as well as the Production Phase, including principal photography (video capture), and the capture of any additional assets including location sound, gathering archival materials, etc.
In this course, students will explore oral storytelling traditions, essay film and documentary production modalities, and author a socially or personally significant digital story, a 3-7 minute video project that will serve as their final creative work. Students will develop these videos, first through process of authoring the story, then, through the process of digitizing the story.