Henry Jenkins, Director of the MIT Comparative Media Studies Program, announced the development of a new media exemplar library, and posted a link to one of the first exemplars, Cory Doctorow. Jenkins described this project as a “a library of short digital films focused around media-makers and the craft and ethical choices they face in producing and distributing their work.” He said that long-range plans are for this to be an open library where anyone can insert their work.

The exciting thing about this is that it’s an effort to provide support for media production within the school day. Henry Jenkins has been working with the MacArthur Foundation on new media literacies, and hopes this project will address some common roadblocks to media production projects faced by teachers and students:

they had no standards by which to evaluate work produced in these new and emerging media; they didn’t know enough themselves to give good advice to student media makers; the students lacked role models to help them understand future opportunities in this space; and the students were facing ethical issues that their teachers and parents didn’t really understand.

I’m anxious to see this project soar, and will be following it closely. The original impetus for me to learn more about the internet was a video project I made with a group of sixth graders about our school lunch program. Everybody loved the video, but there was nothing for us to do with it after we made it. It sits on my hard drive, unpublished because of privacy and copyright issues that I didn’t address when we made it. Guidelines for both technical and ethical concerns are sorely needed as we begin to see growing opportunities to produce new media texts with our students.

updated: Clarence Fisher posted about this today, and left a link to the New Media Exemplar Library. Good to know about that.