Sonoma County Office of Education

Five-Minute Film Festival Entries

Five-Minute Film Festival Entries

Festival LogoThis year, SCOE its second annual Five-Minute Film Festival. This was an opportunity for K-12 students to demonstrate learning in a 21st century context and showcase their work in front of a community audience. To participate, students created short videos (up to five-minutes long) on the theme of “Patterns” and submitted them to a SCOE for judging by a celebrity panel. The top 15 films debuted at the Festival on March 14. Learn more and read about the winning films here.

All 94 films submitted are shown below, with the winning films highlighted first. You can use the Search box, above right, to search for a specific film.


Judge-Selected Winners

Grades K-5
"Patternless" | By Santia DePaola | Oak Grove Elementary


Grades 6-8
"The Amazing Cow Cam" | By Blake Macheras, Kaden Anderson, and Kieran Douglass | Willowside Middle



High School
"Violence in a Generation" | Cheloy Gonzalez, Katie McUgh, Indiana DeFrancesco, and Shayna Kubiceck | Windsor High School



Audience Choice Winner

"Mandala Project" | By the Students of Room 24 | Kawana Academy of the Arts & Sciences


View All
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Patterns in Someone's Day
By Payton Yates
Grade 7, Willowside Middle
Patterns of Fish Found Only in Hawaii
By Zoe Gieseker
Grade 6, Olivet Elementary Charter School
Patterns of Pascal's Triangles
By Olivia Diaz
Grade 5, Oak Grove Elementary
Patterns of Seasons
By Vicente Santana
Grade 5th, Kawana Academy
Patterns of the Four Seasons
By Odin Windhorst
Grade 5th, Kawana Academy
Patterns of the Undiscovered Sea
By "Tristan Angus-Henry, Eden Kerbel"
Grade 4, Oak Grove Elementary
Perfect Patterns
By "Katrina Le, Prisca Niedemair"
Grade 7, Willowside Middle
Persist
By "1. Adam Barrientos, 2. Kyree Burrus, 3. Adrian Bustos, View All...
Grade 6, James Monroe School
Plant Patterns
By Izzy Folgleman and Hannah Lyons
Grade 4th, Oak Grove Elementary School
64 to 72 of 94 Prev Next
Leilan, Student
"I like Amarosa because there's a much smaller student count and so teachers can be one-on-one with you. They can actually help you and be one-on-one with you while the class is doing something else. I feel like that's a huge game-changer." - Leilan, Student