A Year in the Life of a Second Year Emerging Media Design and Development Student 

Spencer Ozbun is the Vice President of The Remnant Trust and a 2023 graduate of the EMDD Master’s Degree Program at Ball State University.

Written by Spencer Ozbun

My second year EMDD story began at Pitch Night 2022, when my classmate Alec Piggott and I pitched our project idea to our classmates  in hopes of forming a Year 2 project team for the EMDD 670 Creative Projects Lab. Our idea was to continue ideating with The Remnant Trust, a nonprofit organization that shares a collection of rare antiquarian documents with the public, to enhance the unique hands-on experience with emerging media technology and storytelling. To our delight, the project was chosen by a number of our peers and the EMDD faculty to move forward.

When the project began in the Fall, our group attended an in-person workshop at the Ball State Fishers Center where we began to define our individual interests/roles within the team. We swapped ideas about outcomes each member hoped to gain experience in via the project. This set the groundwork for a positive team dynamic as each person had an individual stake in the project’s end state. The semester proceeded alongside the EMDD 660 Applied Research Lab, which also focused on the Trust’s problem space. I worked with a classmate on a research subteam focused on the effects of awe, and the other subteam researched the digital preferences of our target audience (18 to 25 year-olds). 

To develop our project past ideation, we narrowed our ideas by conducting empathy research with our client stakeholders to determine which of our ideas was of greatest interest. From there we defined a possible design solution as a group and began creating low-fi prototypes. During the course of the semester we had the opportunity to attend the Trust’s 25th anniversary and had our picture taken with former Vice President Mike Pence, who spoke at the event. Later in the semester, we shared our proposed design solution with our client and gained additional feedback, allowing us to further refine our approach. In addition to testing with stakeholders, we tested our three-tiered transmedia storytelling strategy with our target audience and began developing mid-fidelity prototypes using Figma. At the end of the semester, we delivered our final client presentation and presented our finalized plan for what we would build. 

Spencer Ozbun (left) & Alec Piggot present at the EMDD Symposium, Tuesday, May 2, 2023. Image: Kevin Moloney

In my final semester I enrolled in three classes: EMDD 680 capstone class where I am designing an AR pop-up book for kids using Blippar; my elective ICS 600, a self-reflective technology leadership class; and the second half of EMDD 670 creative lab. This semester, my group has engaged in a collaborative effort with The Digital Corps to develop our storyworld website and a brand style for the project. We have continued testing our designs, developing puzzle sheets to gauge the reactions of our target audience at a tabling event with The Remnant Trust at the Indiana Statehouse. It was exciting to see real users interact with our creations! Recently, we completed a content gathering trip where we took photos and videos and began generating AI images using starryai that we will use to populate the tiers of our transmedia storyworld. We are busy creating content, planning an exhibit for the EMDD Symposium, and looking forward to seeing our work come to fruition by launching our project! 

Upon the project’s completion, I accepted an offer for the role of Vice President of The Remnant Trust. It was a pleasure to earn my graduate degree while working on a passion project I care about, and the results have been beyond my expectations. I am excited to see our work come to fruition as we plan to launch our newly EMDD-created storytelling website in the Summer of 2023. Great ideas belong to everyone!

Find Spencer on LinkedIn.

Go West! – Kevin Moloney reflects on his family history as he travels the Santa Fe Trail

The Journey

Recently, Dr. Kevin Moloney traveled into his past as he traversed the Santa Fe Trail. Moloney has familial ties to the trail. His great-great-grandfather, Dario Gallegos, bought and sold goods in the mid-1800s. An avid cyclist, Moloney moved along the trail via car and bike. He took the time to discuss his trip with Colorado Public Radio’s interview show, Colorado Matters.

Biking the trail allowed Moloney to reflect on his surroundings and the trail’s history. He cycled a portion of the trail in each state he traveled through, “I made a point of hopping on my bike, I’d pull over the car and find a nice stretch of the trail.” Researching his history and connecting to the ecology of the trail created a special experience for Moloney. “As a native westerner it was really particular exciting to sort of roll into the country where what you hear are red-winged black birds and meadowlarks and other bird songs that really inhabit my memories of the west.”

While many think of historic trails such as the Santa Fe and Oregon Trails as highways for travelers looking to settle the west, their place in providing resources and trade for residents should not be overlooked. A part of Moloney’s family history is the story of providing supplies and goods to the people of San Luis.

Dario Gallegos

Dario Gallegos was born near Taos, New Mexico in 1830. Moving into northern Colorado in 1851, he lead the establishment of the San Luis de Culebra settlement and started the first store in the San Luis Valley.

Dario Gallegos circa 1870, photo provided by the Latino History Project, and the R & R Market, now the San Luis People’s Market, built in 1857 photo from Google Maps..

Bringing items into San Luis from Missouri via covered wagon, Gallegos opened the R & R Market in San Luis, Colorado, in 1857. With items such as coffee, matches, chocolate, salt, and textiles, the store was one of the only sources of goods in the area.

Nineteen years before Colorado statehood, Gallegos looked to answer a question still faced today: How do we solve a food desert problem in a remote little town? His answer was the R & R Market which has recently been turned into a co-op and renamed the San Luis People’s Market.

The Santa Fe Trail

The Santa Fe Trail was a route developed by William Becknell, a Missouri trader, in 1821. For nearly 60 years, the trail served as a commercial highway for both American and Mexican traders, connecting Santa Fe, New Mexico, to Franklin, Missouri.

Images by Kevin Moloney.

The trail has served as a trade route, a path for settlers heading west, and a road for military conquest. Although the need for the Santa Fe Trail diminished by the 1880s due to the advent of commercial railroads, its lasting legacy is the mixing of diverse cultures and ideas represented by its native children.

Kinsey’s Emerging Media Design and Development Journey

Kinsey Reese is now a second-year, low-residency, Emerging Media Design and Development Graduate Student who will be working with the David Letterman Learning Experience this fall. She currently serves as the Admissions Social Media Strategist at Ball State University.

Written by Kinsey Reese

Nine months into my first post-undergrad communications job, I started yearning for something more. With my background in public relations and art, and a deep affinity and curiosity for transmedia storytelling, EMDD jumped out in my search as an interdisciplinary program where many captivating worlds collide. I wanted in!  

As a young professional working in a communications role at Ball State, I longed for an engaging educational experience to bolster my portfolio and knowledge—one with an emphasis on hands-on learning. Before starting EMDD, I wondered about the challenge of balancing my full-time job as I entered the brand-new world of grad school. While it has not always been a walk in the park to manage everything, EMDD, and my job have worked perfectly, complementing one another.  

As a first-year student, I’m constantly challenged beyond my comfort zone to explore and master the latest technologies and disciplines. One of my favorite parts of the program is the talented and passionate team of grad students. I’m lucky enough to collaborate and learn beside. My teammates and I have put our interdisciplinary strengths together for projects with design thinking and transmedia storytelling, and I continually find myself in awe of my peers’ outstanding talents. Some of my favorite collaborative projects so far include a campaign to connect young people to volunteer opportunities and another promoting upcycling, and my favorite independent project was a deep dive look at Hamilton through a transmedia lens. The constant focus on real-world application is energizing, helps me create clear connections between classwork and my full-time work, and encourages me to embrace new ideas and perspectives.  

One of my favorite (and unexpected!) aspects of the program is my growth beyond the skillsets I was prepared to explore. For example, Dr. Josh Fisher has challenged me miles outside my comfort zone and pushed me to grow in ways I didn’t predict. We’ve explored AR, VR, Snapchat Lens Studio, photogrammetry, and more. While I’m still a newbie to these subjects, I’ve greatly expanded my tech toolbox. I used to seriously doubt my abilities in tech-focused areas, and while I’m not an expert yet, Dr. Fisher has helped me prove that I’m equipped to thrive and conquer new and scary things. At my full-time job on campus, I now find myself ideating and suggesting tech-centered projects that I can help tackle, serving my team in new, forward-thinking ways that help Ball State stand out in our recruitment efforts. Strategic communications and design have always been at the center of my wheelhouse. These additional skill sets have exponentially elevated what I bring to the table.  

My experience in EMDD has surpassed my expectations and then some. I can’t wait to dive into year two and get deeper in the trenches, collaborating with teammates, faculty and project partners, and utilizing our EMDD know-how more than ever. EMDD continues to challenge and inspire me, taking me to new heights academically, professionally, and personally.

Connect with Kinsey via LinkedIn.

Or view her portfolio.