School of Arts and Sciences Review Winter 2014 | Page 18

Write on Course A Closer Look English and computer science departments team up to offer course that mixes creative writing and animation By Julia Andretta, ’15 T he fall 2013 semester brought with it a much-anticipated new course. Cross-listed in English and computer science, Creative Writing Narrative and Computer Animation is a fun exploration of why arts and sciences work so well together. Dr. Lauren Matz and Dr. Dalton Hunkins have teamed up to expand a popular workshop that they have offered at events such as Girls Day for middle school girls and SBU’s summer academic camp for high school girls into a 15week course for Bonaventure students. “Students who enroll in the course should expect that by the end of the course they will have created several short animated films from scratch,” says Visit us online: www.sbu.edu/English www.sbu.edu/ComputerScience Matz of the English department, who is teaching the creative writing side of the course. “The students are learning how to write in that special way that you need to write to do a screenplay for an animation film. We go over a lot of the basic narrative techniques that are specific to writing a screenplay for cartoon characters, and Dr. Hunkins teaches the students how to do simple computer programming using a program called Alice 2.3 from Carnegie Mellon University.” “The software that is being used for the class is easily learned independent of a student’s background, as demonstrated many times by the middle school girls who attended Bonaventure’s Girls Day events,” says Hunkins, professor of com- 18 School of Arts and Sciences Review puter science who is teaching the animation side of the course. “The workshops at Girls Day were at most 70 minutes long, so there was not enough time to do more than introduce the girls to the computer animation technology, and as a result their productions were mostly just demonstrations of technique. The luxury of time allows for more focus on practices in creating short stories intended for delivery as computer generated animations.” Students watch several famous animated short films in order to get a feel for the genre, as well as delve into Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland as a vehicle for learning about creative narrative style. It does not come as a surprise to either of the two professors that arts and sciences mesh so well in courses such as this one. “Arts and sciences have always worked really well together,” says Matz. “I think it is probably a more recent development that we’ve been compartmentalizing those things. It seems to me that people who are good thinkers with a lot of curiosity about the world are always integrating arts and sciences.” Hunkins and Matz are thrilled to collaborate on this fun, creative, department-crossing course. “I know this has been Dr. Hunkins’ dream for maybe decades – that he would be doing something like this in conjunction with a professor from the English department, and I think it’s a wonderful idea. I’ve enjoyed every minute of working on it so far. It will stretch both of us as faculty members, and that’s good – it’s really good for faculty to keep moving with things,” says Matz.