Showing posts with label Wordpress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wordpress. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Guidelines for building a Wordpress website that works for you

Social Media
Guidelines

This semester, you will use your Wordpress website for several reasons:

  •       Build a portfolio
  •       Turn in your homework
  •       Create a platform to share information with your students
  •       Share your vision and voice
Consider these guidelines to help you find and organize your website.

Step One:
Template. It is very important you choose the right template; it could become a part of your portfolio/resume. 
  • Spend at least an hour searching through various templates until you find one that works for you
  • Make sure it’s easy to read and follow
  • Keep it simply organized
  • It absolutely needs to be photo friendly
  • Stay away from websites designed for marketing or selling stuff
  • Don’t feel you need to select the first one you find. Go through them until you find the right fit
  • When you do find one you like, but then decide two weeks later it doesn’t work, then change it
  • Spend the first month getting to understand and know your website. Experiment!
Lori King's website: With dynamic photo and menu
Step Two:
Homepage or cover page? When a visitor lands on your blog, what will they see? Will it begin with a cover page, with a dynamic photo and a menu like what on the right? Or a homepage, with a menu for the various pages? Or will visitors be greeted with your blog and social media right away?
Consider these options:
Visuals and Voices – This doesn’t have a homepage
Lori King’s Website – This one does
King’s Klass Blog – This is a true blog, not a website
King's Klass Blog: All elements on homepage

Step Three:
Blog. Once you’ve chosen your homepage option, then add a blog, or not.
Some websites are blogs, while others have separate pages for blogs. You have to decide which one works for you. Whatever you decide, your blog posts need to be found fast and easy, because this is where you will post 99% of your essays and photos.

Step Four:
Twitter. Your Twitter feed should be on the homepage.
Visitors need to be able to read your most recent Tweets. They also should be able to click on your name to go directly to your Twitter feed.
Remember the following requirements:
  • Upload professional headshot
  • Brief but informative description
  • Include Website URL in your description
  • Include required hashtags in every post
  • Follow @intro2pj + five others from my feed
Step Five:
Instagram. Your Instagram feed should be on the homepage.
Visitors need to be able to view your most recent Instagram posts. They should also be able to click on your name to go directly to your Instagram feed.
Remember the following requirements:

  • Upload professional headshot
  • Brief but informative description. This can be the same as your Twitter description
  • Include Website URL in your description
  • You must post a first photo to make it active on your website
  • Open a new account if your original account is mostly selfies and personal content
  • Follow @toledophotog + five others from my feed
Prezi presentation on social media
Your Wordpress: The site that binds

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Welcome back visual storyteller and photojournalism students!

   Welcome back!
   I'm looking forward to this semester for several reasons:
   Owens Community College
   The Introduction to Photojournalism course at Owens has been changed. It is now Visual Storytelling. This means less emphasis on journalism, and more on multimedia.
   The name change puts this course more in line with the Commercial Photography and Commercial Art Technology degrees. It also takes away the scary 'journalism' part, considering the students aren't journalism majors. No, there is no journalism major at Owens. This class is as close as it gets.
   Because it's the first semester for this new course, I'll be experimenting with assignment ideas.  The first major tweak is eliminating the sports assignment, and adding podcasting. Don't let the 'visual' part of the course title fool you; storytelling comes in all platforms, even the use of audio.
   The textbook has also changed. We'll be using Multimedia Journalism, by Andy Bull. This book helps "build proficiency and professional standards in multimedia journalism." It features lessons on social media, Wordpress, smartphone apps and building a personal brand.
  Another tweak is to change from Blogger to Wordpress. Wordpress blogs are more universally accepted in the journalism world, and I forced myself to learn and use it this summer. As my own test subject, I developed Visuals & Voices of Toledo, and am quite satisfied with the results. You, as Toledo-area students, will also be submitting your work, particularly your podcasts, to that platform, too.
   I strongly believe that learning is doing, so you will have ample opportunity to learn as you create real and published visual and audio stories.
   We, as a class, will also be meeting once a week in the Owens Outlook student newspaper office. That means one class period will be in the classroom, and the other class period will be in the newspaper office located in the SHAC. I'm hoping this will help get you into the spirit of the newspaper, considering you all will be staff members.
   And the best news of all - all six students have been invited to join me at the College Media Association Fall Convention in Atlanta the end of October. As the Outlook adviser, I will bring back with fresh ideas to keep this student newspaper running for as long as I am with Owens.
   So, students, bear with me as we go forth into the exciting unknown.
Wayne State University
   There are no dramatic changes in this course. 
   However, after reading the instructor evaluations, there will be more group sessions, particularly while going through the photo selection and editing process. In fact, I've added an assignment specifically geared for that process.
   As with the Owens course, you will also change from Blogger to Wordpress. This will go well with the website class many of you have taken, or will take, here at Wayne State.
   For inspiration and to get you into the spirit of storytelling, please view this PBS special on photojournalist and war photographer Lynsey Addario: