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The Central Educational Center’s
Broadcast Video program is getting a boost thanks to Georgia
Public Broadcasting.
GPB has donated studio set pieces from its Atlanta production
studios to CEC’s student videography program. The donations
include set walls, windows, doors, and artistic stage pieces
that have been used at GPB for various television productions
for the past 20 years.
“Set pieces like this don’t really wear out, they just get
recycled,” said Michael Britt, the director of CEC’s Broadcast
Video program. “Studio pieces are made of wood, styrofoam,
fabric, plastic metal… and whatever other material is called
for. New paint, new gels, or new fabric may be all it takes to
rejuvenate a set piece for a new television show. .. These
pieces have a lot of life left in them, and I see them being
used for another 15 to 20 years.”
“They are a great addition and benefit to a video production
class because students can see how professional set pieces are
constructed and used in a real television environment,” said
Britt. “It also helps students to see how well something in real
life translates to a two-dimensional environment.
Before coming to head up CEC’s video production classes, Britt
worked for GPB for 12 years, including as an Emmy-nominated
Executive Producer for “Georgia Business.” GPB Production
Manager Rosser Shymanski contacted Britt about the surplus sets,
who thought the student program would get good use from them.
They will, said Britt. CEC’s Broadcast Video Production I and II
classes teaches students basic camera setup and shooting, script
writing, storyboarding, basic editing. The second-tier class
expands upon those skill sets and adds advanced editing,
advanced camera, and lighting. As a part of their class work,
students produce airable material such as music videos, videos
about a particular class at CEC, and public service
announcements.
“In general, we teach students how to tell a story using the
medium of video,” said Britt. Britt’s program also partners with
Newnan-based digital media company NuLink, among others, and
NuLink houses its local production studios on the charter
school’s campus.
The GPB donations are the latest boost to the program. CEC was
also recently awarded a Georgia Career Academy Project grant of
$150,000 to upgrade the school’s video and recording equipment.
“The grant’s purpose is two-fold: to purchase new video
equipment and to renovate the classroom into a working
television studio,” said Britt. Britt has acquired the video
equipment, and is in the process of converting one room at the
school into a working television studio, complete with a
lighting grid, ceiling mounted lights, a cycling curtain and
backdrops. The grant also is being used to upgrade sound and
recording equipment for the Dr. Lyn Schenbeck’s Business of the
Arts classes at CEC.
The combination of the grants and GPB donations will allow
students to produce higher-level video projects, including
possible projects done in conjunction with business or community
partners.
“These set pieces… will be used by a new generation in their
production of student videos,” said Britt. “We are receiving
such a large donation that we will be able to use them for all
kinds of local programs that we intend to pursue with business
partners in the local community.”
“For example, we received the set pieces for GPB’s ‘Georgia’s
Business.’ We could easily adapt it for a local ‘Coweta
Business’ program,” he said.

The Central Educational Center’s Broadcast Video has received a
donation of surplus studio sets from Georgia Public
Broadcasting. Above, GPB Production Manager Rosser Shymanski,
left, and Michael Britt, the director of CEC’s Broadcast Video
program, talk on the set of a GPB studio at the company’s
Atlanta offices. |
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