
KS3 Digital Media Lesson 5 – Create Your E-Safety Video! Shotcut Editing for Beginners (Dyslexia-Friendly | Practical | Step-by-Step)
In this hands-on, practical lesson, students turn their storyboard into a real video using Shotcut, a free and accessible video-editing program. This beginner-friendly session teaches the essential editing skills pupils need to assemble clips, add images, include text, and communicate their e-safety message clearly and creatively.
All instructions, worksheets and editing guides are fully dyslexia-friendly, with clean fonts, pastel backgrounds, spacious layout and colour-coded steps to support learners of all abilities, including SEND.
What students will learn (Lesson 5):
- How to use Shotcut’s basic tools — timeline, track layers, split tool, trimming, importing clips and images.
- Building a sequence from their storyboard — adding scenes in order, adjusting timings and matching shots to their plan.
- Adding titles and text — on-screen warnings, dialogue captions, labels and e-safety messages.
- Using images safely — copyright-free media, Creative Commons, and safe image sourcing.
- Simple transitions & audio — fade in/out, background music, and ensuring audio is safe and appropriate.
- Saving and managing video files — how to export correctly and avoid losing work.
Why this resource sells extremely well on TES:
- ✔ Completely dyslexia-friendly – OpenDyslexic (or similar) font, pastel colours, uncluttered tasks, step-by-step visuals and large icons.
- ✔ Zero-stress practical lesson – Highly structured guidance keeps students focused and independent, reducing behaviour issues.
- ✔ Suitable for all abilities – From guided beginner tasks to extension challenges (e.g., adding voiceover or colour filters).
- ✔ Real media skills – Helps prepare students for KS4 iMedia, Creative iMedia R093, and GCSE Computer Science digital literacy strands.
- ✔ Ready to teach – Includes teacher slides, a Shotcut quick-start guide, editable worksheets and model examples.
By the end of the lesson, students can:
- Import, arrange and trim video clips or images
- Add text, titles, transitions and simple audio
- Follow a storyboard to build a clear and structured sequence
- Communicate an important e-safety message through video
- Save and export a working draft ready for final editing
This lesson is the perfect next step after storyboarding, giving students the confidence to begin real video creation in a supportive, accessible and engaging format.
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