scorsesefan
Veteran
BTW as part of the documentary I'm interviewing some former students and teachers at a school I attended. It will be at a reunion on the (former) school grounds and there will probably be 10-15 people that I need to interview over 2-3 days. I was thinking maybe a group interview, or 2-3 people at a time? Also, I was thinking of using my Komodo or my Komodo+fx6. Thoughts?Ah, the educational b-roll! I've done a lot of this as well.
I second Doug's recommendation about bringing a 70-200. Classrooms can be very cluttered and busy and being able to isolate the viewers attention through a longer focal length with a shallow stop can be very helpful.
I also love Peter's note about being in tight with a wider focal length, but I've found that can be very dependent on how your coverage was explained to the teachers and administrators who may be granting you access.
Classrooms are not movie sets, so the ability to get your camera 3 feet away from a child's face when they're in the middle of actual instruction from a teacher can be very distracting and usually not what people had in mind when you say you want to get b-roll in a classroom. Of course, if you can have that talk well in advance and really explain what you're trying to do, then by all means get close. But most of the classroom b-roll situations I've been in over the years don't really allow for it.
Good luck!