What a succinct way of describing what photojournalists do!
It is certainly true that once you’re out there with camera in hand, whatever and wherever it is, it
all comes down to you, the shooter: What lens you choose. What composition you
see. How you evaluate light. What moment you capture.
Kayla learned this through experiencing those
important choices via the assignments given in the Digital Photojournalism
class at Wayne State University in Detroit.
I’ve heard grumblings from former students complaining
that the course is too advanced. Too difficult. They come in on that first day
thinking it’s basically a camera class, but find out as the course progresses
that it’s much more than learning apertures and shutter speeds.
Lessons include:
- What news and photojournalism is. This includes identifying all parts of a print newspaper, learning the history of journalism, and identifying eight news values
- The camera: Learning ISO, shutter speed, aperture; composition; reading light; capturing the moment
- Setting up and maintaining social media sites: Wordpress blogs, Twitter and Instagram
- Writing AP style captions
- Law & Ethics
- Collecting and editing audio
- Shooting feature, portrait, sports and photo story assignments
- Using industry standard software: Photo Mechanic; Photoshop; Adobe Premiere Pro CC; Audacity
Screen grab: Blog post by Morgan Kollen |
Even if they will never use a camera again, they, as journalism and PR majors, will undoubtedly work with photojournalists, or manage them. Now they will have an appreciation of what photojournalists do, and what they need to get the job done.
The final project is a culmination of all of the aforementioned lessons. I’m proud to say most of the students did amazingly well. Rather than have a strict rule on how it should be presented, they were encouraged to follow their guts, and hearts. Considering most of these students knew absolutely nothing about cameras and storytelling four months ago, I think they did a great job putting their stories together.
The final project is a culmination of all of the aforementioned lessons. I’m proud to say most of the students did amazingly well. Rather than have a strict rule on how it should be presented, they were encouraged to follow their guts, and hearts. Considering most of these students knew absolutely nothing about cameras and storytelling four months ago, I think they did a great job putting their stories together.
This proves to me that I am on the right track in
keeping the curriculum challenging, but giving them time and room to grow. Most students walk into class with a minimal digital footprint, and depart with a Wordpress blog showcasing a variety of photojournalism content.
Now,
I present to you three wonderful, very different examples of their work. These are their final projects:
Ryan Miller – a conversation
interview format, shot in a difficult lighting situation:
Chris Ehrmann – a video story on
his trip with fellow WSU classmates to Ghana in October:
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