Media Language in Planning and Production - StudyPulse
Boost Your VCE Scores Today with StudyPulse
8000+ Questions AI Tutor Help
Home Subjects Media Media language for planning

Media Language in Planning and Production

Media
StudyPulse

Media Language in Planning and Production

Media
01 May 2026

Media Language Relevant to the Planning and Production of a Media Product

Production-phase media language extends beyond analytical terminology into the specialised vocabulary of professional practice — the language used by media practitioners to plan, execute, and communicate about production.

Pre-Production Language

Term Definition
Concept The core idea driving the production
Treatment A written document describing the proposed production’s narrative, style, and approach
Logline A single sentence summarising the narrative
Storyboard A visual sequence of drawn frames representing planned shots
Shot list A production document listing every planned shot with technical details
Call sheet A daily shoot-day document with schedule, locations, and crew details
Pre-production The planning phase before shooting begins
Mood board A visual collage communicating the aesthetic intentions of the production
Location scout The process of identifying and evaluating potential shooting locations
Production design The visual world of the production — sets, costumes, props, colour palette

Production Phase Language

Term Definition
Coverage Shooting a scene from multiple angles to provide editing options
Continuity Ensuring consistency of details (costume, props, lighting) between shots of the same scene
B-roll Supplementary footage used to cover a cut or illustrate content (common in documentary/news)
Take A single recorded attempt at a shot
Sync sound Audio recorded simultaneously with picture
Wild sound / room tone Audio recorded without action — used in post-production to fill gaps
Rushes / dailies Raw, unedited footage reviewed after each shoot day
Slate / clapperboard The marked board filmed at the start of each take for post-production synchronisation

Post-Production Language

Term Definition
Rough cut An early, unpolished assembly of edited footage
Fine cut A refined, near-final edit
Colour grade The post-production process of adjusting colour, contrast, and exposure for aesthetic effect
Sound mix The process of balancing and combining all audio tracks
ADR (Automated Dialogue Replacement) Re-recording dialogue in post-production to replace inadequate sync sound
Export / render The process of generating the final viewable file from the editing project
Distribution The process of delivering the finished product to its audience
Post-production All work done to the production after shooting is complete

Using Production Language in Folios and Examinations

Production media language should appear throughout:
- Pre-production plans (shot lists, storyboards, call sheets)
- Production journals (reflections on decisions made during the shoot)
- Post-production evaluation (discussing editing decisions, colour grade choices, sound design)
- Examination written responses about the production process

REMEMBER: There is a distinct vocabulary for making media (production language) and for analysing media (analytical language). Both are required in VCE Media. A sophisticated student moves fluently between the two, using production language when discussing the construction process and analytical language when discussing meaning and effect.

VCAA FOCUS: In production documentation, use production-specific language precisely. Referring to ‘the editing software’ is less precise than ‘Adobe Premiere Pro’; ‘shooting the scene again’ is less precise than ‘reshooting for coverage’. Precision demonstrates professional understanding of the production process.

Table of Contents