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Showing 76 to 90 of 153 results Save | Export
Dodd, Julie E. – Communication: Journalism Education Today (C:JET), 1993
Offers four brief stories on redesigning "The Columbus Dispatch" newsroom, what changes technology caused, what high school teachers should teach photographers, and what skills are needed in packaging the news. (SR)
Descriptors: Journalism, Journalism Education, Layout (Publications), Photography
Mattson, Rob – Communication: Journalism Education Today, 2000
Describes several lessons learned during a photographer's internship. Discusses the reality of shooting day in and day out on deadline and helps photojournalists learn more about what the working environment is like. Notes the uniqueness of an internship and how it provides critiques, mentors, equipment knowledge, and tighter editing. (SC)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Internship Programs, Journalism Education, Mentors
Branzburg, Jeffrey – Technology & Learning, 2005
Digital photographs can take up a lot of hard-drive space. In light of this fact, many people are choosing to store their photos online. There are several ways to store pictures on the Web, the most popular being online photo storage services. These services have many benefits. They offer a safe place for photos in the event that one's computer…
Descriptors: Photography, Web Sites, Internet, Information Storage
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Barrett, Terry – Art Education, 1987
This article describes six types of photographs: (1) descriptive; (2) explanatory; (3) interpretive; (4) ethically evaluative; (5) aesthetically evaluative; and (6) theoretical. Notes that these categories overlap and that a photograph will fit into several categories simultaneously. (JDH)
Descriptors: Art Education, Higher Education, Interviews, Photographs
Labour Education, 1983
Taking pictures is not difficult. Taking good ones, however, is a different matter. How to make a good picture, therefore, depends first and foremost on how useful it is to your organization. Artistic and technical quality are, of course, also important considerations, but they will come by experience. (SSH)
Descriptors: Industrial Education, Labor Education, Photocomposition, Photographs
Vandermeulen, Carl – Scholastic Editor, 1981
Provides suggestions for film type, light meter modification, composition, and printing when photographing theatre scenes by stage lighting alone. (HTH)
Descriptors: Drama, Journalism, Lighting, Photocomposition
Townsend, Jerry – Community College Journalist, 1980
Argues that journalists and photojournalists require training in the same skills, including the skills needed in news judgment, organization, interviewing, story idea development, and copy writing. (AEA)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Journalism Education, News Reporting, Photography
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Barrera, Rosalinda B. – Language Arts, 1997
Presents a profile of the life and work of George Ancona, a Mexican-American writer-photographer of children's books. Notes three themes that figure prominently in his life and work: human diversity, family ties, and learning and growth. (SR)
Descriptors: Authors, Biographies, Childrens Literature, Cultural Pluralism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Krasilovsky, Alexis – Journal of Film and Video, 1997
Profiles one of the first of the still small number of camerawomen in the feature-film business. Recounts how she became interested in camera work; the difficulty of breaking into a closed nepotistic union system; the first job; the responsibilities and pleasures of her work; and her present vocation of directing, writing, and producing. (PA)
Descriptors: Film Production, Film Production Specialists, Higher Education, Interviews
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Thelen, Esther; Adolph, Karen E. – Developmental Psychology, 1992
Examines the impact of Arnold L. Gesell on developmental psychology. Gesell is best remembered for his developmental norms, acquired from observations of infants and children. Gesell's ideas about maturation have lost favor, but his belief in infants' native abilities is still a dominant theme in theories. (BC)
Descriptors: Behavior Development, Child Development, Developmental Psychology, Methods
Van Horn, Royal – Phi Delta Kappan, 2004
The absence of common sense in the world of technology continues to amaze the author. Things that seem so logical to just aren nott for many people. The installation of Voice-over IP (VoIP, with IP standing for Internet Protocol) in many school districts is a good example. Schools have always had trouble with telephones. Many districts don't even…
Descriptors: Information Technology, Computers, Computer Peripherals, Safety
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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Davies, Julia – E-Learning, 2006
This article presents an insider view of an online community of adults involved in sharing digital photography through a host website, Flickr. It describes how reciprocal teaching and learning partnerships in a dynamic multimodal environment are achieved through the creation of a "Third Space" or "Affinity Space", where "Funds of Knowledge" are…
Descriptors: Cues, Visual Stimuli, Reciprocal Teaching, Adults
Brecheen-Kirkton, R. K. – 1982
Photography has always been examined within a representational paradigm that does not accurately reflect its true nature. A new paradigm for thinking about photography based upon the work of language theorists and semioticians, and particularly upon the communications triangle of discourse theorist James L. Kinneavy, provides a vocabulary and…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Discourse Analysis, Linguistics, Models
Smith, C. Zoe – 1981
The photographs of Margaret Bourke-White and Lewis Wickes Hine are graphic accounts of the urban industrial United States during the Depression of the 1930s. Hine was a sociologist who initially used his camera to promote social reform and is best remembered for his photographs of immigrants at Ellis Island, New York, and of children laboring in…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Industrialization, Industry, Journalism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Lieberman, Barry – Art Education, 1986
This article describes how a secondary teacher used a camera to photograph his students while working on one- and two-point perspective. It is maintained that the use of the camera provided a new regard for the students and a new respect for what both they and the teacher were doing. (JDH)
Descriptors: Art Education, Classroom Observation Techniques, Freehand Drawing, Photography
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