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Announcements

Final Spring Transmission!

Hi everyone,

First of all: CONGRATS!, this was an ENORMOUS milestone and I see the work that all of you put into it. I mean it when I say: I am really, really impressed.

These projects are so unique to each of you, and seeing you take risks and wrestle with ideas big and personal, techniques familiar to you and totally new, bringing together your time at IMA with the experiences you came in with 
 it has been a joy to be a part of.

For your transition into summer semester, please make one short final Spring journal post reflecting on your feedback, and on the points on the final checklist, describing in a sentence or two what you think your summer steps will be. No need to go into great detail – but think on each point and reflect! Your summer instructors are expecting that you’ve done this – and I recommend doing it while it’s all still fresh in your mind (but also understand if you need a little space first 😅)!

For many of you, you’ll keep the foundation of what you’ve made (a technical pipeline, a process, a topic) but might evolve another aspect (the form, the question, some details, the context). For others, it’s more a matter of getting your work to your audience, and iterating. Some may return to research, perhaps into a different area like technique or methodologies. For still others, your focus will be storytelling, documentation, production, or honing in on a very specific element. Don’t be afraid to leave parts behind, or twist in new directions. It’s ultimately for you to decide
 and It’s all part of the process!

In the spirit of iteration, I also recommend going back to the “personal rubric” exercise we did in class (or any of the exercises on the slides) – but I think the “MATRIX” from week 2 may be especially helpful for many of you. Given what you have, what might different iterations of this work look like?

…On a personal note, (cue cheesy music) running the class with this new approach was a real experiment – even a risk – and I thank you for trying it with me, and trusting me. I can only hope it was as meaningful for you as it was for me: it reminded me of the value of personal connection, that conversation is the space where ideas are nurtured. Many of the things I’ve learned from you, and from working with you, will impact me / my teaching going forward, and have influenced the way that I think about my role facilitating the ambiguous process of developing new work. It’s been invigorating! (Of course, as always, I’m open to your feedback so I can grow, too, so please let me know if there’s anything you’d suggest changing!).

I truly can’t wait to see where the summer takes you. I’ll be tuning in to your final presentations and rooting you on, that day and beyond!

Last but not least, thanks to wonderful residents Danni, Sarah, Brian, Nun, and Beth, who were also amazing support and thought-partners throughout the semester for me, and I’m sure for you as well! Remember to thank them… and your mentors, too!

Don’t be strangers! đŸ‘œđŸ––

Sarah

PS – here are the videos from the

May 8 evening recording +

May 9 Morning recording

May 9 evening recording

Info for later today/tomorrow: final Spring presentation!

Hi everyone!

Today is day 1 of final Spring presentations, woohoo!!! I’m looking forward to it.

 

A few notes:

 

Please arrive on time (7:30), and be mindful of the overall schedule (pasted below). You are welcome to attend all three of the sessions to support each other, and you are required to stay the full three hours of your session, and actively participate by writing feedback on each student’s shared feedback doc. For each student in your group, you are expected to respond to the following:

 

  • Briefly describe the presenter’s thesis/project in your own words:

  • Is there one element that most resonates with you, or you find most memorable?

  • What might the presenter’s next steps be?

  • Any tips on their presentation style?

 

If you have ANY sense that you may experience issues with your connection, please record and send a video to me as backup.

 

So excited to hear from you all! Look over the last two announcements for extra finishing touch tips!

 

Warmly,

Sarah

 

PS – tonight is the deadline for course evals. Pretty  pretty please
 as a favor to me: fill yours out!! Only 11 people have!

https://go.blueja.io/mfe36cazHU-gl6vlA7hLaQ

https://go.blueja.io/ULR8AsdOIkyPsfTrJOLihQ

 

May 8 7:30 PM ET

May 9, 7:30 AM ET

May 9, 7:30 PM ET

START TIME (AM or PM)

Jamie McCoy

Elizabeth Engelman

Ai

7:35

Zoe Robert

Yueqing

Yunshan Jiang

7:51

Jaye Cho

Wentao Wang

Chelsea Heard

8:07

Daisy Lu

Yuqian Ma

Dora Do

8:23

Sehmon Burnam

Jheanell Bailey

Xinran

8:39

BREAK

BREAK

BREAK

8:54

Noah Dixon

Jun Shu

Nicole Padilla

9:10

Suirun Zhao

Yinyi Hu

Lane Shi

9:26

Suri

Jason Snell

Zaida Aleman

9:42

Ian Stewart

Renton Ling

Katherine Park

9:58

Anney Norton

Ada Huang

Yiyang Cao

10:14

END

END

END

10:30

Announcements before your May 8/9 presentation!

Hi everyone! Happy Friday!

I had a few more meetings and thought of a few more tips – these are the most important, so before you present Monday/Tuesday take a look and see what might be missing in your own presentation!

  • Don’t forget to say who you are: give us context about yourself!

  • Remember: sharing inspiring work by others can help give context, too!

  • Don’t hesitate to tell us your wildest dreams for this project and beyond! (As an exercise ask yourself: if you had unlimited time/resources, what would this project look like?)

  • Where are you now in the project? Show us what you’ve done!

  • Give options for what you plan in the summer. Render them clearly with mockups!

  • Please cite your sources, and be explicit about any use of ChatGPT/AI-generated images.

  • Be honest! Celebrate your wins! acknowledge the failures/dead ends and what you learned from them!

Ultimately, the best way to evaluate whether you’re on track for thesis is to look at the  “Final Checklist” section of the syllabus. Not all of that info goes into the presentation, but that list is the rubric for what we as a program hope to see in a complete thesis. I will encourage you to make a thesis journal post doing a “self-evaluation” with regards to this list on the thesis journal: you can do this after Spring semester, or you can do it now, before you present as a way to prepare!.

Also, please mark your calendars: ITP thesis week is happening Tuesday-Friday. There will be a livestream and I *highly* recommend you watch it, as it will definitely inspire you for storytelling for your final summer presentation. Livestream link will be posted here.

Last but not least, I can see only 8/30 of you have filled out the course feedback form! I know you’re busy, but pretty pretty please fill out your course feedback forms!  They are due May 8 at the latest! They are a big part of my own job evaluation, consider it a personal favor!

 One of these two links should work for you, depending on which section you’re officially enrolled in:

!YOU GOT THIS!!!!!!

Sarah

Post-Rehearsal Notes

Hi everyone,

Hope you had a productive time rehearsing your presentation! I really (truly) enjoyed the ones I saw đŸ„Č. It’s amazing to reflect on the journeys you’ve each been on!

In watching presentations – there were a few recurring pieces of advice I found myself giving out. Before May 8/9, please review them and see if any are applicable to you!

  • A highly recommended way for you to end this presentation is: share *different options* you’re considering for your next steps, and seek advice about which to pursue. This will get you some real, concrete, actionable advice on where to focus your energy! Alternatively, you could include a question about something you’re stuck on, considering, unsure about.

  • Do a tech check to not waste time: make sure you know how to share with sound/ video notes!

  • You’ll have 7 minutes to present and 7 minutes for feedback. If you present longer than 7 minutes, it will cut into your feedback – so try to keep an eye on the time!

  • IF you have any sense your connection may be unstable, HAVE A BACKUP PLAN: a prerecorded video.

  • Speak from the I – this helps you avoid generalizing!

  • Try to avoid passive voice (It was found  = passive voice; I found that or Astrologists found that = active voice). There are many reasons active voice makes for a stronger, clear, and more honest presentation, for instance: passive voice makes it unclear whether what you’re saying is a piece of the research/work YOU did yourself, or if it’s research that someone else did that you’re building off of. Give credit where credit is due (to yourself, and to others!)

  • If you feel your presentation is unclear, you MAY want to give your presentation a structure that you outline explicitly at the beginning – ei “I’m going to talk about myself, talk about my research, explain my intentions walk you through the project, and then explain my next steps.” Having sections help!

  • It is often helpful to start with saying WHAT the project is really explicitly – as an overview – and return to it later with more detail. (You can even say “I’ll get more into detail later in the presentation – but first”).

  • Sometimes you have to “kill your darlings” – getting rid of things you love, because they no longer fit the overall context of this presentation. Some of your work may now
 just only background – orient this presentation mostly towards what you’re currently working on and where you plan to go. That means for most of you, share slightly less backstory (or directions you’re NOT pursuing) unless they relate to your current path.

  • Be transparent – I absolutely encourage you to reveal where you have doubts or questions, or when things haven’t worked.

  • Similarly: celebrate your successes! Try to be very clear about what parts you are proud of, gave you new ideas, or just
 work! This helps us understand your overall vision!

  • You want to spend MUCH more time talking about your OWN work rather than the research it took to get there (although that is tempting). That said – your “own work” might mean the new connections you made between the things you learned about.

  • Cite. Although you don’t have time in this presentation to talk through all of your bibliography (artistic inspirations, people whose ideas you are citing) – it’s great to just have them on a slide, possibly at the end, so your reviewers can see that you acknowledge the context you’re working in and people you are drawing ideas from!

  • That said – sometimes showing similar work, or work that inspires you, can actually be a nice shortcut for giving the CONTEXT (the “why/who/where”) needed to understand your work. Meaning: if you show me a few people whose overall careers/bodies of work feel like what you aspire to, I will likely assume you are speaking to that similar audience in that similar context.

There are also more presentation tips compiled on the thesis resources page – but many of those relate more to your summer presentation. These are specific to what I observed today!

As a big favor to me, please fill out course evaluations before May 9! These are how the program (and my work as an instructor) are evaluated by the powers that be. They are anonymous, but I eventually read them (after your grades are submitted), and they also inform how I think about the class in the future, as well as how I am evaluated by NYU. One of these two links should work for you, depending on which section you’re officially enrolled in:

Lastly: An important message from Nun – please reach out to Nun directly if you have any questions, concerns, ideas, etc:  Craig, Ruta, YG and I are getting started on the thesis archive. We’re experimenting with text-to-image models to generate key visuals and are thinking of extracting themes from student projects (their proposals for the time being) to use as input. Could we ask them to let us know if they’re not comfortable with that? It will not be their writing, but the common themes among the projects. 

That’s all for now – I’ll send one more update Monday, and feel free to reach out or make an appointment if you want to talk!

Warmly,

Sarah

Info for May 2 Rehearsal

Hi everyone!

I hope you’ve had a productive week! I’m writing to give you details about preparing for the May 2 rehearsal. You should still remain mostly in the production zone, but reserve one day between today and Tuesday to prepare! Presentation doesn’t have to be perfect, but please use this draft/rehearsal as an earnest effort to get you prepared for May 8/9.

The “Too Long Didn’t Read” Version (for those too deep in production):

Lengthy version (for those who find comfort in detail!):

As a reminder, this presentation is NOT the same type of presentation you’ve seen on the thesis archives (those are like your summer presentation!). THIS presentation is about clearly conveying what you’ve done for the specific sake of getting strategic feedback on what your next steps / focus should be in Summer, in alignment with your personal goals.

To get there, It may be nice to do a bit of reflection, specifically on what you have learned, and what your goals are. Start by going back through your blog posts, and making a list of everything you have learned, and everything you have done. No “thing” is too small! Try to give respect to each piece. If you have any documentation to represent those pieces, perhaps those are the building blocks of your presentation! I also recommend trying to reconnect with your overall goals: why did you start this program? How has the thesis process spoken to that, or has your understanding of your reason shifted along the way, leaving you with new goals (also great!)?

I’ve added a few new sections that might also help orient you for this presentation. One is a detailed description of the points to make in the Spring presentation – which is also echoed in this Final Spring presentation template. I actually *don’t* recommend starting from the template but if you feel it will save you significant time, go ahead.

There is also a “Final Checklist” that represents everything we’d hope you have done by the end of your thesis in Summer. Taking a look at this in advance and seeing which areas you have yet to cover might be a good starting point for thinking about your final Spring presentation – ask what steps you need to take to complete the checklist!

Remember: no one expects you to do more than humanly possible and you don’t need to “prove” anything to anyone – this presentation (and the final summer one) are stopping points on your own journey, and you are simply sharing now as a way to figure out where to go next.

As a preview into the future: your public presentation in summer will be a different kind of presentation. I’ve started compiling some tips here for you to use after our time together has ended! And there are many more on the thesis resources page. If you are inclined, you can take a glance at these now to get a sense of what’s to come. You will get there!

Open to answering any questions you may have!

Warmly,

Sarah


🌞
Sarah Rothberg (she or they)
Assistant Arts Professor
ITP/IMA, Tisch, NYU
To chat in real-time, feel free to book an Open Office Hour.

You got this!

Hi Students!!!!

How are you? I hope enjoying a *flow state* as you focus on a production aspect of your thesis! Remember, at this stage, you should be attending to MAKING primarily. Just make sure to reserve a bit of time to think (briefly) about the presentation a few days before the May 2 rehearsal, and again before May 8/9.

As of right now, there are just a few things I want to remind you:

  • Sign up for the May 2 rehearsals by end-of-day Wednesday. These are required. If somehow no options work for you, please let me know.

  • Keep in mind, the primary goal of the end of this semester is to present something representative of your overall work, articulate your goals, and get feedback on what your next steps should be based on your own goals. In other words, set yourself up to ask: how will your summer work complete aspects of your thesis which support your goals beyond the program? If you’d like some guidance about your presentation in advance, there are some suggested points to cover on the syllabus (the “Final Spring Presentation”) section. That said, it’s up to you to figure out the best way to present your work to best solicit “next steps” feedback, and it may be different for everyone! Happy to chat, of course!

  • The more frequently you update the thesis journal – the more I know how I can help you! Never hurts to make a post, or look at others’ posts!

  • The final May 8/9 presentation date/times are below. These are approximate times for your reference, in case you want to invite your mentor to your exact time. But please note, you are required to stay from 7:30-10:30 and be actively present, to provide feedback to your peers and support each other.

I do have a few office hours to sign up for if you have any questions or just want to brainstorm or get feedback. If you’d like to meet at a time not listed, don’t hesitate to reach out.

That’s all for now!
Sarah

May 8 7:30 PM ET May 9, 7:30 AM ET May 9, 7:30 PM ET START TIME (AM or PM)
Jamie McCoy Elizabeth Engelman Ai 7:35
Zoe Robert Yueqing Yunshan Jiang 7:51
Jaye Cho Wentao Wang Chelsea Heard 8:07
Daisy Lu Yuqian Ma Dora Do 8:23
Sehmon Burnam Jheanell Bailey Xinran 8:39
BREAK BREAK BREAK 8:54
Noah Dixon Jun Shu Nicole Padilla 9:10
Suirun Zhao Yinyi Hu Lane Shi 9:26
Suri Jason Snell Zaida Aleman 9:42
Ian Stewart Renton Ling Katherine Park 9:58
Anney Norton Ada Huang Yiyang Cao 10:14
END END END 10:30

[THESIS] weekly announcement – prep for April 18 class

Hi Class!

Weekly update time
 most importantly, during these next few weeks your goal is to advance your project! Keep yourself moving forward – let the making guide you!

April 18 is our last “formal class”

To prepare: Please add ONE full screen image of your work in progress (or an element of your work in progress) to this slide deck: Visual Share Out Deck. We’ll be using this in a very short activity, in which, without preamble, your classmates will respond to what they see. This can be useful for getting first impressions, testing out a style, understanding the legibility of something. Feel free to ask me any questions you have to decide what image – or just go with your gut!

We will also be going over tips for letting the making guide you, storytelling, documentation, and a few other considerations to keep in mind going forward. Come with questions – or let me know anything in advance you want me to cover!

Lastly, we’ll review details for May 2 and May 8/9, as well as what to expect in the summer.

After class April 18:  if you can stay
 Jaye has requested your presence for a playtest! We’ll try to wrap early so it’s not too long a zoom.

May 2 

Just so you know in advance, we’ll be doing 1 hour sessions of groups of 4 students at a time so you can practice your final.  Will share the signup sheet in class.

May 8/9 Preview 

The dates/times for final presentations are currently split out as represented in the table at the end of this message. Please review the date/times and let me know ASAP if you see an issue, and know there may still be some slight shuffling around – which we’ll review in class April 18.  You’re expected to stay the full 3 hours to support and give feedback to your peers.

!đŸ€Ș!

I have added *emoji reactions* to the blog (very important! haha) – if you don’t like these let me know but I thought it could be a fun way to stay casually engaged in each other’s posts. Use them (or not, haha)!

The ITP Show – May 14 + 15 (students near NYC)

Some of you have asked about participating in the ITP Spring show – it’s by no means required, but like the “show-a-thing” show proved for many of you, a deadline and a condensed amount of feedback can be really helpful. I am going to be in touch with Noah from ITP to see what the details are for Low Res participation – in the meantime, can you let me know if you are interested in participating?

Th ITP show is typically for people physically located in NY (ITP has a “you have to stand next to your project throughout the show” policy) – BUT I suppose if you could enlist a local “buddy” to set up and tend to your project, I can advocate for students not in NYC to show work through their buddy.

NYUSH Playtest day (students near Shanghai)

Some of you in Shanghai have wanted to use the facilities there to set up your work. I am working with the local team there to set up a playtest date – can you let me know if you would be interested? I imagine one or two weekend days where you all have use of a classroom to stage your project or prototype, user test, and co-work could be helpful.

A final word of wisdom: take a look at your project with fresh eyes and ask: why you, why here, why now? I find that the more you can locate and emphasize your own voice, interests, talents, expertise, experiences – your unique point of view as a person in this time and “place” – the stronger the project. It’s there in your work – how do you bring it out?

That is all for now!  Please keep up the good work of posting on the journal, checking in with each other, meeting with me and your mentor, and, most importantly
.ADVANCING YOUR PROJECT!

🐣

Sarah

DRAFT SCHEDULE:

May 8 7:30 PM ET

May 9, 7:30 AM ET

May 9, 7:30 PM ET

Suri

Wentao Wang

Chelsea Heard

Sehmon Burnam

Noah Dixon

Nicole Padilla

Suirun Zhao

Jheanell Bailey

Lane Shi

Zoe Robert

Elizabeth Engelman

Katherine Park

Jaye Cho

Yinyi Hu

Jason Snell

Jamie McCoy

Yueqing

Zaida Aleman

Yuqian Ma

Jun Shu

Yiyang Cao

Daisy Lu

Xinran

Ai

Ian Stewart

Renton Ling

Dora Do

Anney Norton

Ada Huang

Yunshan Jiang

This Weeks’ Notes!

Hi class!

How was Show-A-Thing?! I hope helpful, insightful, and energizing!

Just a few notes for this week:

  • Please post a reflection about Show-A-Thing! It will help you consolidate your ideas (and it will help me know where you’re at as a result!). Specifically think through: did anything change about your project by going through this process?

  • If you haven’t already: IMA Low Res Thesis: Final Dates + Check in, by Friday please!

  • Keep up the momentum! Our next all-together meeting is April 18. In the meantime, you should be meeting with your peer-group + resident, each other, your mentor.

  • I’ve posted a few new appointments for coming weeks on my OH calendar – but remember you can always email me if you want to meet and no listed times work.

Also – this may not be relevant for all of you, but if you find yourself wondering “Is my project IMA enough?” I’ve written something about that in the Project Guidelines – which I’ll also paste below.

Warmly,

Sarah

Is My Project “IMA” Enough?

Some of you might find that you’ve landed on a project that doesn’t really seem to involve much technology at all – and of course the last thing you want to do is “add technology” just for its own sake. That said, this is an “Interactive Media” program, so in order for your thesis to be appropriate for this context and reflect what you’re learning here, you may want to think through what ways you might involve… interactive media! There are more ways to do that than adding a technology for its own sake, so consider contextualizing this as an IMA project through 


  • Research / Input (for instance, using a novel method to gather data to inform your work)

  • Process (for instance, using a new tool to create, or creating a new tool)

  • Interactivity in the project itself (any combo of input, process, and output)

  • Topic – is your work informed by, commenting on, or otherwise connected to our contemporary media landscape (does this work address something about emerging technology?)

  • Documentation – (can you capture this work in a way that leverages emerging media? for instance 3d scanning…?)

  • Distribution (how does the work get out there? for instance, through a novel use of social media?)

 

And, if all else fails, ask yourself: what gave you the idea to do this work right now? Are you connecting with some approach you learned at IMA? Is it something in response to the present-day state of technology? Lean into those questions, and you may find the answer was there all along – you just needed to emphasize it!

[THESIS] a few to-dos before week’s end!!

Hi all,

Hope the rest of your week was nice! I’m writing with a few to-dos to look at before this week’s end!

I’ve also been getting some questions about final deliverables (now that you have done/posted the production schedule) for Spring/Summer. The easiest way to refresh your memory on the purpose of this class is to take a look at the class syllabus and project guidelines. But if you’re in a hurry and need a shortcut, just remember that your thesis work is made up of four elements:

  • Process (which involves research, expression of intentions, project planning, prototyping, testing, iterating, integrating feedback, documenting, and presenting)

  • Project (a “making” element, which can be at any scale of your choosing)

  • Archiving/Documentation (along the way, and at the end through the archive)

  • Public Presentation

At this stage, possibly the most helpful thing you can do is watch the public presentations from past years and (gently) ask yourself: what do I need to do to be able to do a presentation and formalized archive entry, by the end of my time at IMA? There are several examples on the project guidelines page, and there are hundreds of them in the archives, which can be found on our Resources page. Click the “watch” button to see the presentation!

Keep in mind, that is just for looking ahead. Your final Spring presentations are not as formal as the Summer ones, but your main objective for the Spring one will be to give enough information (research, documentation of your project as it is, your imagined next steps, and open questions) that you can get feedback on how best to proceed in the Summer.

Last – in class I encouraged you to meet in thematic groups – if you do this and let me know,  you can count it as one of your six required peer group meetings. I made this wacky spreadsheet of thematic overlaps I see in your work (pasted below) as a starting point – reach out to a group you want to talk to! – or add your name to a topic you feel like you fit in (these were just my best guesses, not scientific – you can even add a category yourself!)

I hope that all makes sense, and I’m here to answer any questions if you have any!

Warmly,

S

Before class 3!

Hi all,

Tomorrow we have our third official class, from 7:30pm-10:30pm ET! Hooray! Remember, these are required sessions but if there is some compelling reason you know you can’t be there, please let me know so I can adjust accordingly.

 

We’re going to do a few different activities together (one you’ll need miro for, the other is a structured conversation, in which you’ll talk about where you’re at and receive advice from other students), and then have some time for sharing/discussing/workshopping your production schedule and your testable prototype (if you don’t know what those are – see the last announcement!).

 

I’ll also be going over logistics for


  • Mentorship

  • Show-A-Thing

  • The rest of the semester

    • We will use May 2 as a presentation rehearsal day

    • May 8 or 9 students will be split into groups of 10 for formal presentations for feedback with outside reviewers

 

With that in mind
 do you have a burning question or something specific you’d like to go over in class? Let me know now, so I can make sure to address it if it’s appropriate! Feel free to just respond directly to this email.


See you all tomorrow!
Sarah