Gwybodaeth Modiwlau

Module Identifier
FM21620
Module Title
Writing for Film and Television
Academic Year
2022/2023
Co-ordinator
Semester
Semester 2

Course Delivery

 

Assessment

Assessment Type Assessment length / details Proportion
Semester Assessment Written Outline for Script  (30-45 minutes) word count approx 2000 words  70%
Semester Assessment Story Breakdown  word count approx 1,000 words  30%
Supplementary Assessment Written Outline for Script  (30-45 minutes) word count approx 2000 words  70%
Supplementary Assessment Story Breakdown  word count approx 1000 words  30%

Learning Outcomes

On completion of this module, students should be able:

  1. Show a writer's working knowledge of the purpose and effects of good storytelling;
  2. Demonstrate an understanding of classic story structure, which forms the basis of most film and television drama;
  3. Understand and work with the various elements necessary for the construction of dramatic narratives;
  4. Demontrate a professional attitude towards writing for the film and television industry.

Brief description

Writing for Film and Television is concerned with laying the groundwork for all effective storytelling. It places emphasis on story structure, and on the uses of various elements of plot and character. The module will help you to recognise and understand the dramatic options available to a writer, and to make effective choices from within those options.

Content

Course delivery:

10 x 2 hour Lecture/Workshops and one half hour small group tutorial.

The module will introduce students to the art of storytelling. They will learn techniques to enable them to develop a strong engaging story idea. Over the ten weeks through a series of writing exercises students will be encouraged to build a strong idea suitable for transfer to the screen.
They will be introduced to the art of good storytelling; brainstorming ideas; three-act story structure; character & characterisation; genre; types of scriptwriting.
Students will develop their own idea from initial premise to full outline stage. Workshops will provide a collection of techniques that will help them to re-evaluate and improve their work.

Module Skills

Skills Type Skills details
Communication Story Breakdowns and Outlines require a high level of written communication. Lectures include segments on how to communicate effectively in these media, and the overall assessment of a piece includes assessments on how well the concept has been communicated.
Improving own Learning and Performance Students are expected to drive their own learning and to develop their own unique creative approaches. Part of the assessment for the Outline is how well students have improved the work from Breakdown stage
Information Technology Not assessed, although it is the Department's expectation that students present their work in word processed format.
Personal Development and Career planning Career planning is not assessed. However it will be developed through discussion of the expectations the media places on a writer, what types of approaches to the media are construed to be professional, and what type of work is most likely to enhance the student's writing prospects.
Problem solving This element is not assessed directly. However, all scriptwriting involves problem solving: what type of character will best convey a particular theme? What plot devices will most effectively propel the story to the next plot point? The effectiveness with which the author has solved problems is evident in the quality of the finished product.
Research skills The element is not assessed directly. However most scripts involve some form of specialized knowledge that the student must research independently.
Subject Specific Skills The module culminates in an assessed story outline which is expected to be of industry standard. A particular skill relating to screenwriting is, therefore, inherent in the module.
Team work Students will have the opportunity to access and give feedback on each other's work.

Notes

This module is at CQFW Level 5