Category Archives: Art

I’m in!

Just got this in my email today, and I’m very, very happy about it.

Aaron Smith

We are really looking forward to your presentation at the Powering Up With Technology Conference on Saturday, November 17, 2007. Registration will begin at 7:30 a.m. You are scheduled to present Digital Photography in Any Classroom in Classroom E 314 from 12:15-1:15. A computer and projection device will be provided in each room. You will also receive a continental breakfast and a complimentary box lunch.

This year our conference will again be held at Northwestern High School, 7000 Adelphi Road, Hyattsville, Maryland 20782, 301-985-1820. Northwestern High School will be available for a trial run Friday, Nov. 16th from 5-8pm and for set up Saturday Nov. 17th from 6:30 am.

The conference schedule on Saturday, November 17th:

7:30 – 8:15 Registration
8:15 – 9:15 1st Concurrent Session
9:30 – 11:00 Introductions & Keynote Address
11:15 – 12:15 Lunch & Vendor Walk
12:15 – 1:15 2nd Concurrent Session
12:15 – 2:30 2 Hour Hands-on Session
1:30 – 2:30 3rd Concurrent Session
2:45 – 3:45 4th Concurrent Session
4:00 – 4:30 Prize drawings in the Auditorium

A hospitality area will be set up in the Media Center where coffee and light refreshments will be available and materials may be stored.

This year, we would like to make conference handouts and presentations available online after the conference. If you would like your materials posted, please email them to PGCPS.PoweringUp [at] pgcps.org.

Directions:

Exit Beltway at New Hampshire Ave/Rt. 650, South, towards Takoma Park. Continue on New Hampshire Ave. to Adelphi Rd. and turn left. Continue on Adelphi Rd., cross University Blvd and pass the University of Maryland. Continue on Adelphi Rd. to school on the right.

I look forward to a very successful conference.

If you have any additional needs or concerns please contact me at: Christo.Fuller [at] pgcps.org or 301-386-1608 ext. 2250

Christopher Fuller
Conference Chairperson

Academic Aesthetic 148

A lot to say, but not a lot of time to type. This one’s a low quality car-cast done on my way home this afternoon.

Show Notes:

Yeah, I’ve been busy.

Academic Aesthetic 144

Sorry for the delay, now on with the show!

Show notes:

  • Another nice audio comment by Chris Craft. Where’s your audio (or video) comment? (And yes, I haven’t edited the wiki recently for the same reason I haven’t been podcasting.)
  • To make a podcast I need time, energy, and inspiration.
  • Usually I lack inspiration, but this time I needed time and energy.
  • Inventory is done! Hooray!
  • Are there times when we replace analog technology with a digital equivalent that isn’t as good? Is digital always better? I want to hear your thoughts on this.

Session 8: Let’s Tell a Story

hpim5454.JPGThis presentation by Melinda Kolk is showcasing software by Tech4Learning. This isn’t the first time I’ve met up with someone from that company.

They have more than one product, the first they’re showing is a program called Frames that can be used to make animations out of still images. iMovie has the same functionality, but its interface isn’t designed specifically for that. Frames’ interface is.

She’s admitted that iMovie and Photostory have similar functionality. It’s not about the technology, it’s about how these kids are learning.

Each of these videos she’s showing is helping to reinforce “core” (I still dislike that label) content areas. Some of them involve cross-grade collaboration, which is neat.

Session 7: Digital Filmmaking – A Beginner’s Journey

hpim5450.JPGPresented by Kimberly Dyar & Beth Jacobs.

I was a little late coming in, but they’re talking about how easy it was to pick up the skills needed to use iMovie. After one teacher got help, she had the skills to help others.

Camera angles

Standards

Does the music match the mood?hpim5451.JPG

Students made public service announcements after looking at some examples. They started with a worksheet to build their ideas. Te students actually had trouble creating one clear idea – instead, they wanted to write scripts.

They still have handouts, but most of it’s on a CD. When I first came to MICCA everything was on a paper handout, sometimes 20 pages thick. Now, most presenters seem to have at least some form of digital version.

Pan and zoom shots were forbidden, so they could think more about composition and less about home movies.

They also talked about some space before and after the dialog so it wouldn’t get clipped off by the transitions. That makes sense, although do they always need to have transitions? Still, you can always cut out the quiet times if they don’t go with the commercials pacing.

Identify camera angles in examples before you set them loose.

Don’t describe the shot – draw it in the storyboard.

Tips:

  • Buy an external firewire drive.
  • Buy the warranty.
  • External battery charger.
  • Tripods. They got theirs from Big Lots, I found mine at flea markets and Goodwill stores.
  • External microphones.
  • Buy 1 to try out, but then standardize your equipment. Every manufacturer has their quirks.
  • Get a book called “Digital Photography for Teens.” Not sure I’ll buy the book, but you might wish to do so.
  • Consent & Release forms.
  • Save the tapes until the students have finished their projects. They’re backups!
  • Small group camera instruction as teams finished their storyboards were more manageable.
  • Win over an administrator before you get started.
  • Demonstrate how the equipment can serve the entire school community.

Several students were special ed, and it all still worked. (I’m not shocked – every time I give my special ed kids an opportunity they rise to the occasion.)

They’re talking about sharing the project with every teacher / administrator / supervisor that will listen – the support followed.

Fund raising idea: The class with the LEAST money won. It became subversive as students gave to other teachers.

Be concise when planning the budget.

Session 5: Linking Technology to Language and Fine Arts

hpim5447.JPGWoohoo, tech and fine arts! This one’s presented by Magdalena Fitzsimmons.

Started off with a warm-up asking for the elements of visual arts and music, then went into justifying the existence of an arts program in the schools.

Chicago Arts Partnerships in Education

Arts help build and reinforce the transfer of knowledge.

A mention of Howard Gardner and his theory of multiple intelligences. His books are difficult to read, but the ideas are worth knowing.

Arts Integration “IS” and “ISN’T” time. It’s not just doing a song about birds because the students are learning about birds. It needs equal emphasis on both academics and the arts.

She’s showing examples for use in a lab, but the examples are printed out into a handout. I wonder if she has a website … I can find online profiles, but that’s it.

One example involves a graphic organizer that includes hyperlinks to media files.  The teacher prepares that in advance, then the students complete the organizer.  Not a bad way to get low-tech kids (& teachers) started.

She’s only playing songs that have no English words so the students focus on the music rather than the lyrics.  Good idea.

How might I do that with visual arts?  Show abstract art?  Cut out or zoom in on portions of the composition?  I’ll have to give this some thought.

Thursday’s Keynote: David Warlick!

There are still a few presenters here that have printed handouts. David Warlick is not one of those people.

http://handouts.davidwarlick.com Tags: flat, classroom, warlick

There’s a password, but I won’t blog that.

Taking a tour of the classroom of the future. Mr. Warlick is using his trademark sense of humor.

The words “World” and “Flat” have been used in combination with the word “is.” A major requirement for ed-tech keynote speakers has been fulfilled.

“What do I need to know, in order to be a part of this increasingly cooperative world?”

“He’s not investing in the technology! He’s investing in the story!”

Talking about “the long tail.” Basically, Amazon.com and other online companies make more money off of the old stuff than the new releases. Sales/item goes down over time, but there are so many items. This makes sense – most traffic to this site is from web searches that link to posts I wrote months (or longer) ago.

Buy Warlick’s books! Put his son through college!

“Our job is not to teach kids what to read and what not to read.” Our job is to help them make that decision.

Talking about Pluto and Wikipedia. I think Pluto got a bad rap, but that’s my opinion.

“When we have new questions, where do the new answers come from?”

RSS demonstration.

Winter of 2004: Warlick started listening to blogs instead of just talking through them. It became a conversation.

RSS can be used to build a “Personal Learning Network.”

“Pay attention to the information experiences that [our kids] have adopted! Respect what they have made of their world! A world that is both getting smaller and infinitely richer!”

Session 3: Digital Photography and Video Projects for Improving Learning

snipshot_hi_e46marw9dld.jpgPresented by Dr. Arnie Abrams. I’ve never seen Dr. Abrams present before, but he has some good ideas.

Photojournalism – tell a story, news or otherwise.

Digital ethics – nice. More people need to talk about how the camera can (and often does) lie.

Commercial assignment – more specifically, have the students create a commercial that advertises a product. The video he showed had students using aliases in the credits, wich is a nice idea.

Storyboarding instructions without words.

I may have to leave early to get to my own session on time. I hope not.

The last example had copyrighted music in it. Teachable moment about copyright infringement?

“Everyone’s a reporter.”

He talks about “Single Frame Animation.” I know it as “Stop Motion Animation.” To each their own.

Send digital photos back to the host after a field trip.

Time shifting – a look on the present from the viewpoint of the future.

Digital scavenger hunts – those are fun.

Visual seating charts – one of my schools uses photos on a chart so the Kindergarten teachers and students know who gets on which bus.

He’s reccomending software at this point. Why must PhotoStory be mentioned so often? It’s a nice program, but I hear about it more often than PowerPoint nowadays.

Giving tips – keep it under 3 minutes, privacy, copyright, ethics, ethics, ethics.

Sample rubrics.

Gotta go – my sessions on the other side of the continent.

Academic Aesthetic 137 Video

Chris Craft tells me I should register ipostwaytoomanypodcasts.com.  I think he’s right.

Show Notes