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Codes, Tech, and Processes for Form

Media
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Codes, Tech, and Processes for Form

Media
01 May 2026

Codes, Conventions, Technologies and Processes Relevant to the Selected Media Form

Successful pre-production planning requires a thorough understanding of the codes, conventions, technologies, and processes specific to the chosen media form. These four elements are deeply interconnected — the conventions of a form are partly constituted by the technologies that produce it, and the processes through which a production moves are shaped by both.

The Four Elements and Their Interdependence

Codes are the systems of signs deployed within a media form to construct meaning — technical, symbolic, written, and audio codes.

Conventions are the established patterns and expectations that define a form, genre, or style. They arise from the accumulated practice of producers working within that form.

Technologies are the equipment and software used to produce, post-produce, and distribute media products within the form.

Processes are the sequential stages through which a production moves from concept to distribution.

These are not independent categories:
- The conventions of documentary film depend partly on the portability and inconspicuousness of handheld camera technology
- The conventions of social media video are shaped by the technical constraints and affordances of smartphone production and platform algorithms
- The codes available in a radio production are limited by the absence of visual channels — all meaning must be constructed through audio codes

Relevant Codes and Conventions by Form

Fiction Film

  • Codes: Cinematography (shot sizes, angles, movement), editing, score, dialogue, performance, production design
  • Conventions: Three-act structure, character arc, genre conventions (thriller = suspense; romance = emotional beats), establishing shot → scene

Documentary

  • Codes: Observational camera, interview framing, archival footage, voiceover narration, direct address
  • Conventions: Expository mode (narrator explains), observational mode (camera observes without intervention), participatory mode (filmmaker visible), reflexive mode (documentary questions itself)

Photography

  • Codes: Composition (rule of thirds, leading lines, framing), exposure, depth of field, colour/black-and-white
  • Conventions: Genre conventions (portrait = direct gaze, photojournalism = in-the-moment candid, landscape = wide establishing)

Radio/Podcast

  • Codes: Voice, music, sound effects, silence, pacing of speech
  • Conventions: Programme structure, intro/outro music, interview format, narrative arc across episode

Aligning All Four Elements with Audience and Narrative

The selection of codes, conventions, technologies, and processes must serve both the target audience and the narrative intent:

  • A production for a social media audience will use codes suited to vertical framing, short duration, and text overlay — not cinema widescreen conventions
  • A documentary intended to produce empathy for its subjects will use observational camera codes and participant-centred conventions — not the authoritative voiceover of traditional expository documentary
  • A narrative about marginalised experience may deliberately subvert mainstream codes and conventions to produce a production that itself feels marginal, challenging, or unfamiliar

Planning for Form-Specific Processes

Pre-production must account for the specific production process of the chosen form:

Form Production Process Notes
Fiction film Scripted, shot to coverage, edited to cut
Documentary Flexible shooting, reactive to subject; editing creates the narrative
Photography Single-image or series planning; post-processing stage
Radio Scripted or semi-scripted; recording, editing, sound design

STUDY HINT: For your pre-production plan, create a table that maps each major production decision (a specific code choice, a technology selection, a process step) to: the convention it draws on, the audience it is intended to engage, and the narrative purpose it serves. This four-way mapping demonstrates depth of pre-production thinking.

VCAA FOCUS: Students often underestimate the importance of form-specificity. A pre-production plan that does not demonstrate understanding of what is conventional and appropriate within the chosen form will not meet the assessment criteria.

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