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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/drcprod/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114In May, at the\u00a02016 Digital Media and Composition Institute<\/a> at The Ohio State University, we (participants) were each tasked with creating a Concept in 60<\/a> video. This video needed to explore a concept of literacy, composing, or multimodality and be exactly 60 seconds\u2014no more, no less\u2014including the title screen and credits.<\/p>\n Because I have done the “Concept in 60” project in the past at my home institution (University of Louisville), I wanted to challenge myself with my DMAC 2016 approach by creating three specific rhetorical constraints for myself, which I go into further detail about in the earlier rendition of this piece<\/a>.\u00a0Here, I will focus on one of these goals: to closed caption my video.<\/p>\n I wanted to ensure that my project would be accessible to as many audiences as possible by incorporating closed captioning and putting access at the top of my brainstorming, designing, and composing process. As researchers and composers, we should strive to begin with access rather than treating it as an afterthought. Additionally, captioning is not merely an add-on for disabled people; it helps makes a video more accessible to all audiences.<\/p>\n While it might seem as simple as uploading my MP4 file to YouTube, using YouTube’s closed captioning tool, and downloading the MP4 file off of YouTube, unfortunately the captioning track does not get “burned onto” the video file and therefore does not download with the MP4 off YouTube. In other words, these are OPEN captions, not CLOSED captions. However, you CAN download just the .srt captioning track file (as visualized below) and use other software to attach it back to the MP4 file.<\/p>\n After a few hours of tinkering during our final studio time Thursday, and with the excellent help and brain power of our fearless associate director of DMAC, Erin Kathleen Bahl, I found a way to attain success in my closed captioning goal.\u00a0Here, I will recap the winning steps. These can be repurposed for multimodal research projects, but I also want to\u00a0offer this process as a pedagogical tutorial to share with digital composition students.<\/p>\n First, I want to note that the detailing of “failure” moments are omitted for the sake of clarity here, not because they weren’t productive in some form. To sum up with a brief example: we were not successful using VLC or solely YouTube to create the closed captioned version of my Concept in 60, but through lots of googling, playing, failing, more googling, and more playing and failing, we learned some strategies for achieving the captioning goal as well as some new-to-us software. Ultimately, it’s important to take risks and play; failure is is part of the learning and multimodal composing process.<\/p>\n