For some students, becoming a TV personality is a dream of the future. For the students at Banks County Middle School in Georgia, it is the first bit of fun in their day thanks to faculty member John Fuller. BCMS’s morning television show is designed and broadcasted using BoinxTV, and it has transformed the daily announcements into a fun program run by students.
BCMS has always had a morning television program, but before the facilitator’s baton was passed to John, it was broadcast over the school’s closed circuit channel using a camcorder run directly for the picture and a handheld dynamic microphone run through a mixer for audio. John wanted to find a way to improve the quality of the morning show and increase student involvement. He was familiar with Final Cut and Photoshop, so he started searching for a way to do it live in order to make the show look like a real broadcast. At first, he didn’t find many options for running live chroma keying, moving backgrounds, lower thirds and graphics all at the same time – most of the solutions he found were workarounds or involved some coding that was over his head. A friend recommended BoinxTV and John downloaded the demo.
“The setup was easy to understand and the features were simple to implement,” he says. “After the trial version ended, my principal was blown away by the quality of the show, and students were more engaged while watching. The school accountant was very excited that there was a huge school discount, too!”
John knew BoinxTV was the perfect program for BCMS, and he introduced it full time in the fall of 2012. Exclusive to eighth graders, students interested in working on the program as a host, a teleprompter operator, a camera operator or a BoinxTV operator are invited to fill out a short application and then serve on the crew for a month before a new crew comes in. Each new crew has its own personality, and John says it’s their differences that keep the show entertaining.
“Most of our bloopers happen at the beginning of the show because the student operating BoinxTV went live before counting everyone in,” John says. “The hosts will also occasionally get tongue-tied and start to laugh! Our student body also goes above and beyond to make students with special needs a part of everything we do. One of those students was our cameraman this year, and often times the hosts would invite him to join them as the third host. He usually stole the show with his animated personality and expressions.”
Once John sets up the software and explains to a new crew how to operate the layers, they are usually off and running in about ten minutes. By the third show, each student is able to run BoinxTV without him. John loves that the layout is not intimidating even for beginners. It gives them more time to focus on the show itself. Daily announcements generally consist of a similar format and order, but the script is updated every day. Program highlights include the Pledge of Allegiance, a moment of silence, what’s on the lunch menu, what the weather will be, the fishing forecast (after all, it is a rural school!), a joke of the day, club activities, sports team game updates and a closing statement from the principal, who offers students words of wisdom.
“My students love the ability to easily change different backgrounds to fit the time of year or theme,” John says. “Before spring break, we changed the background to a beach and even used a giant wave as a background. The hosts pretended to surf while giving the announcements.” (Check that out in the video above!)
John personally enjoyed making a custom weather map of their county via BoinxTV’s online tutorial, under the “Creative Possibilities” section.
“The tutorial was very clear on the BoinxTV website,” he says. “Many of the other layers are customizable, too. I like that I can change layers to make the show represent our school.”
BCMS primarily uses BoinxTV for daily announcements, but they have utilized it in ways beyond that, too. Each year, the middle school students put on a talent show in the gym and they use BoinxTV to broadcast it. John brings in spotlights and backdrops and uses BoinxTV and a projector screen to broadcast the show for everyone to see. They even have the student body vote for a winner over text message. Some students have even come to John asking to use BoinxTV for their class projects. He has seen many ideas come to life, including news reports for historic events students are studying and students interviewing each other as they pretended to be characters from the books they are reading. The school also used BoinxTV to broadcast its latest system-wide spelling bee to all of the students.
The faculty at BCMS has gone above and beyond to give their students the broadcasting experience of a lifetime, and the videos are super fun! BoinxTV is easy for educators to integrate into their students’ school day. For BCMS’s show, John uses BoinxTV, a MacBook Pro, a Sony HandyCam via FireWire to the MacBook, a USB Snowball Mic, a Behringer UCA202 audio interface, an Apple Mini DisplayPort to VGA Adapter, a generic VGA to RCA converter, TeleKast (a free teleprompter software he runs on a spare PC) and green paint for a handmade greenscreen. Try bringing BoinxTV into your school and see what your students come up with!