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Very occasional musings about
photography education

Teaching Photography to Preschoolers

30/4/2023

1 Comment

 
Tjaša Kovač

​Hi! My name is Tjasa and I am a preschool teacher in Slovenia . I work with three-year-old children, who are very curious about anything new. Our preschool is very open to new ideas, including supporting the creative development of children in all areas. Therefore, with the support of the preschool management, we have decided to include the teaching of photography. 

The Slovenian kindergarten curriculum includes several aims which may relate to photography:
  • Stimulating curiosity and enjoyment of art;
  • Encouraging the experience, expression, and enjoyment of beauty;
  • Experiencing and learning about artistic works;
  • Nurturing and developing individual creative potential in the phases of experiencing, imagining, expressing, communicating, and asserting oneself in artistic activities.

Despite having a children's camera available, I still prefer to use my personal camera, a Fuji x10. My three-year-olds use it under my supervision. I believe that children can also learn a lot by using semi-professional equipment, while ensuring their safety and using the camera with my support. 
The Role of the Teacher:
The teacher plays an important role in teaching photography to preschool children. As an expert, they must understand the importance of play and exploring the world, so they must use pedagogical methods that are suitable for this age group. In addition, they must encourage children's creativity and imagination to motivate them to create their own photographs and express their ideas and emotions.

The teacher also plays an important role in selecting and evaluating the photographs that children create. They need to choose those that are appropriate for showing to other children and encourage self-criticism so that they can improve and progress in their work. This process should be carried out according to the child's age and individual abilities. The teacher can support children to express their ideas and develop their motor and cognitive skills.
Three-Year-Olds and Photography:
Children who are barely three years old still have small fingers so holding and operating a camera can be a challenge. In addition, children at this age are still in the process of developing their cognitive abilities, which means that their understanding of the world is limited. Here are some ways you can teach a three-year-old the basics of photography:
  1. Use a simple camera. To teach photography at the age of three, use a simple and safe camera that children can operate themselves. You can also use a smartphone camera.
  2. Use simple commands to help the child understand what to do. For example, you can say, "Press the button to take a picture" or "Hold the camera with both hands."
  3. Choose simple objects to photograph. Start with simple objects that the child can photograph. This can include toys or objects found in nature.
  4. Encourage their creativity. When teaching photography, it is important to encourage the child's creativity and allow them to photograph things that interest them. Let them experiment and explore, as they will experience both the best and worst results.
  5. Praise the child. Praise the child for every picture they take, as this will make them feel more confident and enthusiastic about photography. ​
Picture
Why should preschool children learn photography?
Preschool children are very curious and eager to explore the world around them. Children who take photos will learn to observe the details in their environment, developing their observation and perception skills. Photography can also help develop their motor skills as they learn to hold the camera and press the shutter button correctly. Learning photography can also encourage confidence and independence in children, as they learn new skills and feel proud of their accomplishments. Additionally, photography can help children learn about new technologies and tackle the challenges brought about by the technological world. With help, children can create exhibitions of their photographs. These can be a great opportunity for them to learn about other cultures. This builds confidence and empathy.
Picture
This project has presented quite a challenge for me, as the children are very young. Coordinating eyes, hands, and pressing the shutter button can be a problem. Many of the photographs were aimed at the ground because the child was focusing only on the shutter button and not on framing. Some children needed my help to support the camera as their hands were still too weak. However, I wanted to start early enough so that I could accompany and challenge them until they reach the age of six, when they enter school. The children were very motivated when it came to photography and couldn't wait to have their turn to take pictures. When I started this project, there was always a crowd of other children around the one taking the pictures. At the beginning, I showed them the basics of how to aim the camera and press the shutter button. Then I let them manipulate the camera themselves. After a few days of manipulation, I started directing them towards framing their shots. I guided them by saying things like "Look, you can take a picture of the toy on the table" and "Find the red block and take a picture of it." The children slowly became more attentive to what they saw on the screen.

The children were all very different from each other in their understanding, perception, and coordination so I adjusted my approach to each individual. Some quickly grasped the basic instructions and soon started looking for their own shots, taking pictures of their friends playing, their teachers, toys, decorations, and more. Others needed more guidance, more precise instructions, and, above all, a lot of repetition. Some children lost interest in taking pictures after their initial curiosity.

When reviewing the photographs with the children, I was careful to comment on what I saw, saying things like, "Ah, I see you took a picture of a dinosaur." I refrained from evaluating the shots or the photographs themselves. At this age, I think it's most important for the child to fall in love with this kind of activity. The process is currently more important than the final product. However, when they have mastered the basics, I will take a more critical approach to the process of photography - from framing to commenting - and guide them towards self-reflection.

I also wanted to introduce the children to the entire process of photography, from pressing the shutter button to printing the photograph. So, I took them to the computer room, where we transferred and reviewed the photographs on the computer. Some children recognised their own photographs. Together, we chose the best ones, and the children even saw the printing process. Later, we created an exhibition of their photographs in the playroom, which they still enjoy looking at today.
Picture
​I was surprised to see that at this age, some children already showed a sense of photography and camera operation. Some children quickly mastered the camera without any special help. 
Conclusion
Incorporating photography into kindergarten and home activities has many benefits for children. Children will learn new skills, have fun, and develop while doing so. Therefore, I would like to encourage parents and educators to take advantage of the opportunity and encourage children's creativity through learning photography in preschool.

https://www.tjasakovac.com
1 Comment

The Only Way is Ethics (Part 2)

27/8/2022

11 Comments

 
Jon Nicholls, Thomas Tallis School
As promised, here is part two of a blog about subjectification in (photography) education, in response to the ideas of Gert Biesta. As I mentioned in the first part of this blog post, Biesta's ideas are sophisticated and carefully argued and I don't pretend to grasp every nuance. I really do encourage you to read them yourselves, in the original. Nevertheless, I'd like to refer to a few ideas here in order to suggest that we photography teachers have a special duty to consider the ethical dimensions of our practice.

Note: Unless otherwise stated, all the quotations are from Gert Biesta's World Centred Education, Routledge 2022

Biesta offers a stark reminder about what's at stake here. In the race to the top of the league tables and ever greater competition between schools, students are at risk of being made the objects of various interventions:
We are too quickly drawn into monitoring and measuring the learning itself, looking for the interventions that will produce the desired learning outcomes, trying to control the whole machinery, and thus easily lose sight of the fact that children and young people are human beings who face the challenge of living their own life, and of trying to live it well.
This argument might sound, to some ears, like the kind of typical view of a die-hard 1970s 'progressive', an "enemy of promise". I'm sure you are familiar with this kind of dismissive put-down which features prominently in many Twitter debates. Biesta is keen to side-step the traditional vs progressive binary. He is a defender of teaching and schools and although his ideas are informed by many progressive thinkers, my own sense is that his theoretical standpoint isn't so easily pigeon-holed. If we might be tempted to consider the quotation above as a bit 'soft' or too 'child-centred' (insert your own EduTwitter put-down here), he is quick to remind us of the historical context:
[...] we still live in the shadow of "Auschwitz" ... because it has shown us that the systematic objectification of (other) human beings is a real possibility with disastrous consequences.
He contrasts democracy with populism. In the "impulse society" we are told repeatedly that we can have whatever we want. ​
Unlike populism, the very point of democracy is that you cannot always get what you want.
​If one of education's primary goals is to ensure that something like Auschwitz never happens again, it must undermine, disrupt and challenge the objectification of young people, and promote subjectification. In order to illustrate the meaning of the (rather odd) word 'subjectification', Biesta refers to the Parks/Eichmann paradox.

The Parks/Eichmann Paradox

In 1955, Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a Montgomery bus, defying the driver's authority to assign her seat. In his 1961 trial, Adolf Eichmann, architect of the mass deportation of Jews and others to the Nazi extermination camps, denied responsibility for the consequences of his actions using the argument that he was just following orders. Which of these people, asks Biesta, was the best student - the defiant Parks whose action initiated the Montgomery Bus Boycott, or the compliant Eichmann, who carried out his orders precisely and efficiently? Which person has been more successfully educated?
Picture
Rosa Parks booking photo following her February 1956 arrest © Alabama Department of Archives
Picture
Adolf Eichmann at trial in 1961. Israel government press office via Wikimedia Commons
Rosa Parks chose to resist what she considered to be an unjust situation. Adolf Eichmann removes himself as subject from the equation when he delegates the responsibility for his actions. He fails to show up as an "I" when he claims to be just following orders. Biesta argues that this paradox illustrates precisely why learning (qualification) and development (socialisation) is not enough. What will I do with what I have learned and how I have developed when it matters, when I am faced with the question "Hey, you there, where are you?"

Turning our attention to photography education, how might we open ourselves up to a more balanced view of the purposes of our lessons so that we can find more space for subjectification. Biesta, and others, provide us with several clues about how this might be achieved.
Picture
Sabiha Çimen - Asya plays with pet birds in the teachers’ room, Rize, 2018

On framing

There's been plenty of heated debate about the role of knowledge in education. This has prompted some interesting responses from visual arts educators - additional Art History classes, for example. It's a bit of straw person argument in the sense that no-one (I know) is advocating for a knowledge poor curriculum. The issue though is that knowledge isn't enough if it doesn't make sense to the student. As others like Michael Young have argued, knowledge is powerful if it challenges or extends what is already known. Powerful knowledge is disruptive. It is the world calling to the student, but not a world they are necessarily familiar with. The teacher's role is therefore to stage encounters with this new knowledge and to help students step into the frame of that knowledge so that it can make sense. Teachers live in this frame and it's easy to forget what it's like to be outside it. Biesta uses the example of his confusion during maths lessons and his frustrated teacher exclaiming "But can't you see it?" Each student may need a personal invitation, a key with which to unlock the door and appear in the frame.
The difficult work of teaching, therefore, is not that of providing students with knowledge - which makes the current insistence that schools should focus on "knowledge" a bit silly - but is that of pulling students 'inside' the frame within which such knowledge begins to make sense [...] It is precisely this latter act of "pulling" that goes fundamentally beyond all the sense-making that students can do, up to the point where they encounter something new, something radically "beyond" their own horizon of understanding.
Picture
Paul Mpagi Sepuya - Drop Scene (0X5A9913), 2021
The PhotoPedagogy contribution to this effort takes the form of Threshold Concepts. These ideas about photography are intentionally troublesome. I often use the analogy of an attic or jumble sale. An invitation is made to cross the threshold into a space that is full of potentially fascinating stuff. There are few labels or sign posts to get started but it's up to the student to rummage around and find something they perhaps didn't even know they were looking for. 

On not knowing

The eye should learn to listen before it looks.
-- Robert Frank
This is one of my favourite photographer quotations because I find it both beautiful and intensely puzzling. As David Campany and Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa have reminded us recently, photographs are indeterminate and ambiguous. They promise to tell us something about reality but really only show us the light bouncing off a surface. There is something radically open about photographs, almost despite how they look. Perhaps the attitude needed by photographers, then, is a parallel openness, a willingness to be affected. Robert Frank seems to suggest that we might start by listening, very carefully, to what the world wants from us.
Picture
Robert Frank - Detroit, 1955
Hearing is entirely dependent on sound that comes from outside. We can't intend it. It requires a different kind of attentiveness than the other senses, a certain amount of vulnerability and openness to what will be given to us. What we hear will be a surprise to us, not something we can intentionally control.

​The sense of smell is invoked by photographer Peter Fraser to describe his (almost uncontrollable) receptivity to both external and internal stimuli:
It’s almost as if there’s a smell in the air and I’m being forewarned that a moment is approaching so I need to have the camera ready. In a sense, I never set out to do anything other than make myself available to allow that moment where there is an upsurge of energy from the unconscious mind into the conscious mind which is the moment when I know I have to make a photograph.
​-- Peter Fraser
How can we, therefore, encourage our students to hear (or smell) with their eyes, adopting a radical openness to the world and its gifts, allowing themselves to be affected? Knowing only gets you so far. A state of not knowing is also vital for those of us who wish to be the subjects of our own lives.

On resistance

Picture
Henry Wessel - from Incidents, 2012
If democracy is to be defended and strengthened, Biesta argues, education should be concerned with freedom. But this is not the 'freedom' of the Libertarian market. We must learn to come into relationship with our desires, to test whether other people and the world with its limited resources can tolerate them. Are our desires desirable? Biesta calls this a 'grown up' way of living in and with the world, as opposed to an 'infantile' or 'ego-logical' relationship. He reminds us that this is not a matter of age. Young people are capable of being 'grown up' in this way, just as some adults remain 'infantile' in relation to their desires. Both the world and, more specifically, other people provide resistance. The job of visual arts teachers, therefore, is to encourage students to acknowledge and meet this resistance. 
The educational significance of the arts, and perhaps the educational urgency of the arts, lies in art education beyond expressivism and creativity [...] Art is the dialogue of human beings with the world, art is the exploration and transformation of our desires so that they can become a positive force for the ways in which we seek to exist in the world in grown-up ways. And that is where we may find the educative power of the arts
-- Gert Biesta, Art, Artists and Pedagogy, 2017
We may want to impose our will on the materials with which we work - a lump of clay, a blank sheet of paper, a camera etc. These materials will inevitably resist our intentions and we will need to adjust accordingly. Despite appearances, things are not inert. They may push back against our desire to manipulate them. For young people, this resistance can be frustrating and dispiriting. As teachers, we can support students to understand that things are not without their own agency. This ecological attitude supposes that we are all bound together in a constantly shifting network of relationships. 
When you’re photographing and you’re walking through the world, something catches you, you notice something. You’re connecting with it and you’re responding to it. You’re basically saying “Yes” to it. You’re saying “Yes, it’s interesting.” You’re kind of like a free agent between your instinct, your anticipation and your intelligence and those things keep moving back and forth in a very fluid way while you’re photographing and that experience is really pleasurable. It’s really exciting and it’s the reason that I photograph. That and the way photographs look. The way they describe the world.
​-- Henry Wessel

On pointing

Biesta's concern with the form of teaching leads him to conclude that its fundamental educational gesture is that of pointing. When we point we show something to someone. We redirect someone's attention, turning their gaze towards the world. Crucially, pointing is beautiful because it is not about control. "Hey you, look there!" is an attempt to redirect the gaze but it does not force the student to do as we wish. It is an open gesture, it opens the world to the student and, potentially, opens the student to the world. The world, however, is not a "playground for the student's desires". Whatever freedom is generated by our pointing is the freedom to exist as subject 'in' and 'with' the world in a grown-up way.
Picture
Ai Weiwei – Study of Perspective, Trump Tower, New York City, USA, 2017
When we point our cameras at the world, there is an implied redirection of the viewer's gaze. We are saying "Hey you, look there." But this gesture of pointing goes in two directions. We gesture out to the world and the world gestures back at us. The world exists in its own right. It is real. It does not exist simply to be an object for us. It resists us, "puts limits on what we can do with it, what we can want from it and how we can make sense of it." Because photography puts us into direct relationship with the world (the world, after all, is already full, not a blank page or canvas on which we can project our desires) it can speak to us if we are paying attention. As photography teachers, we can help to nurture this sensitivity in our students so that they recognise when the world might be calling to them, asking them a question. This is a subjectifying moment or event.

On risk

The significance of pointing [...] is that it doesn't force the student into anything, but appeals to his or her freedom and, in a sense, reminds the student of his or her own freedom. Precisely because of this, precisely because the freedom of the student is at stake and, more specifically, because the freedom of the student is called upon, the work of teaching is without guarantees.
So much of current educational discourse (perhaps influenced by the learning sciences) seems focused on the removal of risk from the educational equation. And yet, when we remove risk we take away what is educational. We diminish the agency of our students to refuse, to walk away, to resist, to become subjects of their own lives. Biesta refers to this as "the beautiful risk of education". Schools need to provide the time and space for students to work through the question of their own freedom - what is the world (social and natural) asking from me? Teachers need to provide them with support and sustenance so that they can stay with this question. There is no way to control how students will respond when the world calls to them. The risk of subjectification needs to be shared and this is a test of the strength of a democracy.
[...] without subjectification education runs the risk of becoming the "management of objects".
Picture
Aaron Siskind - Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation, 1953-1961
Teaching is as mysterious and ineffable to me now as it was when I started 32 years ago. The same is true for photography and I suppose that's why both endeavours are so fascinating to me. If you've got this far, thank you for your patience. I hope I have provided you with some food for thought and a little sustenance for the year ahead. 
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