Tuesday, 20 March 2012

Alternative Secondary Education in Ireland Open Day


If you have the time and the opportunity to take a visit to East Clare and see the work of the Alfa Project age range is from 15 - 17 years and well worth taking a look to see what they have been up to in the Arts

Saturday, 17 March 2012

Project Based Learning a real inspiration

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xfP53Alnbhk


I came across this video when I was researching  Interdisciplinary Project Based Learning on the internet and hope you will be inspired with the intergrity, simplicity and understanding of what a teaching and learning environment is all about.


Saturday, 10 March 2012

Stop Motion Animation - Burning Issues

                                     

Stop Motion Animation



I was interested in having a go at stop motion animation. Now I don't know why I didn't try it before. I love the versatility of stop motion. I created this stop motion by drawing the map of Africa on an A4 sheet and using a scanner I carefully drew flames over the original image, scanning as I added more flames. Unfortunately, when I had finished I decided that it would look "cool" to have the green forest in Central Africa disappearing as the flames engulfed the trees, this has taken me hours as the only way I could think of doing it without printing out 38 A4 colour images was to use Windows Paint programme and carefully rub out the green and add a cream colour with an air brush, very time consuming! I edited the stop motion images through Windows Movie Maker and added music from a free African music web site. Great experience although I think I will get a stand for my camera next time it would make it faster.





Posted by Picasa

Photo Essay

Photographic Essay with the aim to produce a magazine article

Digital Media Brief:



After I studied the definition of photo essay, and choose my subject “fuel less cookers” I thought how best to a create a photo essay.


Research

 I spent time researching the situation in Uganda

Between 2000 and 2010 Ugandans had cut down 1, 763,000 hectares totalling 37.1% of their total forests web site: http://rainforests.mongabay.com/deforestation/


Picture of deforestation in Uganda
  Fuel less cookers


Charity involved in supporting this initiative


PETO - Education Fund for Aids Orphans - is a child-focused initiative that was founded in 2003 by Justine Ojambo, Robert Wanyama and Richard Bwire, three brothers who were AIDS orphans themselves. After the death of their parents, these three youths were mentored and assisted by Dutch Mill Hill Missionary Rev. Fr. Wynand Huys, who financed their education up to the university level.

Having benefited personally from expanded educational opportunities, the founders of PEFO were troubled by the difficulty that many orphans and vulnerable children in their community faced in accessing formal education, as well as their bleak living conditions. The founders believe that the most viable way to liberate the vulnerable children of Africa is to invest directly in their formal education, which will widen their horizons and opportunities in life.


Fire – the importance of fire in human civilisation, rights of passage, magic of fire




 Irish Traveller way of life








THINK BOARD – Variation on the mood board theme, but more appropriate for placing your ideas on to help you to think about what it is you want to say WHAT’S THE MESSAGE , Clarifying and generating ideas, especially if you are like me and have lots of ideas but selecting the ones or the one you want to pursue seems impossible!

Think board



During my research, I discovered that fuel less cookers have been used for centuries and are still being used in some parts of the Western world as well as the Global South . I found recipes, instructions, and whole web sites devoted to them. So, because I could not photograph the women in Africa making one or get my family to dress up and be on camera! my best solution was to make one myself. I used this for two projects

1)      Video essay – speedup film of making a fuel less cooker, “tongue in cheek” film to high light the simplicity of making a cooker using today’s materials.

2)      Comic strip photo essay about the idea, concept andproduct. The idea was to create a comic strip of me making the fuel less cooker and to place the images on to the box I had made the cooker with. This box then acts as a functioning product and photo essay in one, it  can also be used as a teaching tool. The comic strip is the magazine article.

Development Education Definition


Development Education – Definition from Irish Aid  "An educational process aimed at increasing awareness and understanding of the rapidly changing, interdependent and unequal world in which we live. It seeks to engage people in analysis, reflection and action for local and global citizenship and participation. It is about supporting people in understanding, and in acting to transform the social, cultural, political and economic structures which affect their lives and other at personal, community, national and international levels"


Irish Aid's definition clarifies that it is both about understanding our unequal world and about engaging and acting to transform the world.

Sunday, 4 March 2012

Film in the curriculum with Basil Al-Rawi


Basil Al-Rawi studied at the National Film School in Dun Laoghaire in cinematography and is currently studying for a Masters in photographic studies at the University of Westminster, London.
His web site shows a variety of time based media productions including documentaries, music videos, films both long and short, as well as some interesting photographs.
http://www.basilalrawi.com/

Documentary entitled Tom Mathew – waiting for goldfish, is a well-crafted example of documentary making.

 Link to documentary http://vimeo.com/5621629
Basil Al-Rawi spent a day with us, covering film and digital media in the classroom, film studies as part of the Leaving Certificate exam, film as a teaching tool for History and Aprreciation of Art as well as cross-curricular work. We also looked at different genres of filmmaking and technical knowledge about camera shots, lighting, setting, colour, and costume. Using film in other ways to excite and ignite the imagination of students, like posters, titles and credits, as well as film trailers. These could be used to create stand-alone schemes or support other schemes such as graphics, typography, drawing, and painting.

We discussed using a film poster as a starting point for animation, set design, and making a zoetrope.

Film studies as part of the Leaving Certificate Art Appreciation exam
Leaving cert example question 2011
Section 111 – Appreciation of Art

Q16. The success of Pixar Animation Studios is firmly fixed on the understanding that the
animated world should be based on the real world. Discuss this statement with
reference to any one of Pixar’s productions, such as Toy Story 1, 2 and 3, The Incredibles, Monsters Inc, Wall-E and Up.
And Discuss briefly two film-making techniques that make these films so visually attractive.
Illustrate your answer.

Leaving cert example question 2009
Section 111 – Appreciation of Art

Q18 Recent animated films from the studios of Pixar and Dreamworks, such as Shrek, Finding Nemo, Ratatouille and Wall-E, have proved to be very popular.Discuss this statement with reference to two scenes from one of these animated films.
And Discuss briefly the film-making techniques that make these scenes so visually appealing.
Use sketches to illustrate your answer.

What we need to know about film questions in the Leaving Certificate


1.  Film questions are not always included in the exam paper

2. Often include popular films of the day, very difficult to predict which films they will choose to include in the exam


3. If you intend to include film in art appreciation, include titles, credits, and film craft (techniques).


4. Marking schemes -  Look at previous marking schemes @ ww.examinations.ie


Q18
2009
Recent animated films from the studios of Pixar and Dreamworks, such as Shrek, Finding Nemo, Ratatouille and Wall-E, have proved to be very popular. Discuss this statement with reference to two scenes from one of these animated films. Discuss briefly the film-making techniques that make these scenes so visually appealing. Use sketches to illustrate your answer.
Marks
A
Discussion of scene 1 from chosen film.
15
B
Discussion of scene 2 from chosen film.
15
C
Brief discussion of film making techniques.
10
D
Sketches
10
Total 50


5. Questions tend to be based on popular films so encourage students to watch current films at home or for homework!


6. Prepare the students with vital information they will need to tackle this question including illustrations (practice drawing illustrations from films.


7.  Make sure you go through past questions thoroughly, breaking down the questions into their various components , encourage them to read the questions carefully and not to tackle the question unless they are confident of gaining good marks, they are not easy questions as some students might think!


Film in the classroom

Introducing film into the classroom

Watch part of films that show simple technique, camera shots -long & medium shots, camera angle – low angle, high angle, flat or eye level, a bird’s eye view, oblique angle shot, camera position – pan, tilt, tracking.

Alfred Hitchcock used three simple camera shots excellent to show students how effective these three shots are

 - Start with a close-up of the actor
- Cut to a shot of what they're seeing
- Cut back to the actor to see his reaction


Other films suggested by Basil to include in the classroom
Inception – by Chritopher Nolan


Paprika – by Satoshi Kon

Perfect blue – by Satoshi Kon


Inception's director Christopher Nolan bought the rights for Paprika and Perfect Blue. This shows use of scene conversion from popular cartoons like Paprika (animie) into American movies like Inception.
Documentaries - Wasteland
Film, History, and Appreciation of Art
Introducing films made by famous artists to explore their work, support art appreciation and bring another dynamic into the classroom, examples include Salvador Dali.
Sallvador Dali created the dream scene in Spellbound by Alfred Hitchcock

Films made using the artists work

Recorded Interviews with artists such as MC Escher

Biographical films made about famous artists: just some examples below
SURVIVING PICASSO       LUST FOR LIFE      THE AGONY AND THE ECSTASY     POLLOCK     MOULIN ROUGE     THE WOLF AT THE DOOR        MODIGLIANI     
GIRL WITH THE PEARL EARING
Thinking Ideas - making animation in the classroom - back to basics
Zoetrope is a device which creates the image of a moving picture. The device is essentially a cylinder with vertical slits around the sides. Around the inside edge of the cylinder there are a series of pictures on the opposite side to the slits.
The magic lantern is the predecessor of the modern day projector. It consisted of a translucent oil painting and a simple lamp. When put together in a darkened room, the image would appear larger on a flat surface.
 

Thaumatrope   was a simple toy used in the Victorian era. A thaumatrope is a small circular disk or card with two different pictures on each side that was attached to a piece of string or a pair of strings running through the centre. When the string is twirled quickly between the fingers, the two pictures appear to combine into a single image.
A phenakistoscope was an early animation device, the predecessor of the zoetrope.
Flick book
Praxinoscope invented by French scientist Charles-Émile Reynaud, was a more sophisticated version of the zoetrope.
More thinking ideas for possible schemes................. 

Using posters as a starting point or the theme for a scheme

- Use a poster to create a scene in the classroom - each student to film the scene in their own way.
- Poster to lead to an animation like the poster of a feather created for Black Swan


History & Art Appreciation - digital media, create set design - Caravaggio - recreate scene and photograph, like Brian did for his bricolage project.


Typography - animated typography

POSTER - as the source starting point, students engage with digital media in a holistic way

Recreate a scene from a film - to include lighting, camera shots, acting, costumes 

Show a clip of a film and get the students to design what happens next - cliff hanger scene

Film Making resouces availbale:

Irish Film Institute - IFI
Films in school - FIS
Study Guides - film education UK
Movie storm - 3D animation software
USA film resources and lesson plans
Ripper for PC to copy scenes from video