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What fields of education would be the most beneficial for a video editing/video special effects career?
What fields of education would be the most beneficial for a video editing/video special effects career?
4 answers
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Annemarie’s Answer
HI,
I work in an Education Technology company and we deliver content to students all over America.
We create video content, which involves editing and special effects. We would also have editing on virtual video content.
We also use vendor companies who use these skills.
A suggestion would be to look for sites that use video content, and see if you can make connections with someone in that company.
there are a lot of avenues, but ed tech companies or Video production houses who make other educational content would be a good place to research.
I work in an Education Technology company and we deliver content to students all over America.
We create video content, which involves editing and special effects. We would also have editing on virtual video content.
We also use vendor companies who use these skills.
A suggestion would be to look for sites that use video content, and see if you can make connections with someone in that company.
there are a lot of avenues, but ed tech companies or Video production houses who make other educational content would be a good place to research.
Updated
John’s Answer
Honestly, none. You can learn practically everything possible online about filmmaking. Use that to get a job on a set, and keep the ball rolling for yourself. A formal education is rather unnecessary in the modern environment of filmmaking. Your phone probably shoots video. Go make some documentary work about things in your life. Win some awards, get famous, and then thank me in the acceptance speech for saving you thousands of dollars in student loan debt.
If you absolutely must go, your local college probably has a broadcast curriculum. Go there. Learn as much as you can. Full Sail and AFI are nice but awfully expensive, with no guarantees from them. I know people who have been to both schools. Some are doing well, others, not so much. Your education will be top-notch at any of these luxury colleges until the next round of new tech pops up and what you know becomes outdated again. The basics will never change though, so go learn them for a song locally. If you can make great content for no money, it helps open the doors to the money, in theory.
If you absolutely must go, your local college probably has a broadcast curriculum. Go there. Learn as much as you can. Full Sail and AFI are nice but awfully expensive, with no guarantees from them. I know people who have been to both schools. Some are doing well, others, not so much. Your education will be top-notch at any of these luxury colleges until the next round of new tech pops up and what you know becomes outdated again. The basics will never change though, so go learn them for a song locally. If you can make great content for no money, it helps open the doors to the money, in theory.
Updated
Jessica’s Answer
Being in the Professional Training field, I work with a lot of folks who develop educational video content- the jobs in this particular field are typically called Curriculum Developers, UX Designers, (Video) Content Designers, Learning Designers, etc. The field is increasingly moving towards a digital first training strategy so designers with video development experience is incredibly helpful! Having been a curriculum developer in the past, I know they come from varied backgrounds, most only require a college degree and experience in the various development tools (Articulate Storyline, Adobe Creative suite, etc.) Having a background in education/former teachers was common, but not the only path. I also see a lot of folks starting in a general IT/developer role, and specializing in video/content design.
Check out UX Designer roles to see what the typical education requirements are.
Become familiar with some industry standard tools like Adobe Creative suite.
Jessica recommends the following next steps:
Updated
Michelle’s Answer
Hi,
I transitioned into a career in educational product management after working for a few years in media development and production, and I've noticed video editing becoming an increasingly sought after skill in a wide range of educational organizations that want to increase their social presence or expand into online content delivery models! Lots of educational companies, universities, and schools will have rolling contractor positions for content creation that would be great for getting your foot through the door and feeling out different paths in the industry. Permanent roles in production are rarer but certainly around as well! Professional learning and higher ed is a space worth looking into for that.
If you want to expand your work beyond video, I would also recommend looking into UX and multi-modular learning design. This could be a great way to transition into an ed-tech path . If you enjoy the more technical aspects of production, you might find this fulfilling as well!
I transitioned into a career in educational product management after working for a few years in media development and production, and I've noticed video editing becoming an increasingly sought after skill in a wide range of educational organizations that want to increase their social presence or expand into online content delivery models! Lots of educational companies, universities, and schools will have rolling contractor positions for content creation that would be great for getting your foot through the door and feeling out different paths in the industry. Permanent roles in production are rarer but certainly around as well! Professional learning and higher ed is a space worth looking into for that.
If you want to expand your work beyond video, I would also recommend looking into UX and multi-modular learning design. This could be a great way to transition into an ed-tech path . If you enjoy the more technical aspects of production, you might find this fulfilling as well!
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