2011 All Rights Reserved.
No part of this publication can be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the written permission of Lauren Mulkey.
Call me anytime, we can talk.
Lauren Mulkey
503.871.1660 [email protected] www.laurenmulkey.com
Academy of Art University School of Graphic Design 79 New Montgomery Street San Francisco, California 94105
MFA Thesis Dave Gottwald Fall 2011
Pencils Before Pixels: a process 7”x10.5”, 150 pages
Adobe Acrobat, Illustrator, InDesign, Lightroom, and PhotoshopCanon Rebel XSi Epson Perfection V500 Photo
Giant Horse Printing, San Francisco, CA The Key Bindery, Oakland, CA
Brown Davey Board Finch 100lb text New Century School Book, Abadi
PHONE EMAIL
SITE
COURSEADVISOR
TERM
TITLE FORM FACTOR
SOFTWARE CAMERA
SCANNER
PRINTER BOOK BINDING
COVER STOCK TEXT STOCK TYPEFACES
Table of Contents##
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INTRODUCTION
PAST PROCESSMidpoint Advisors
BRANDEnvironmental
Schwag Books/Materials
Web/App
PENCILS BEFORE PIXELS: WORKSHOPWeekend
PENCILS BEFORE PIXELS: CLASSSixteen Week Course
Chapter
7
Introduction
Brand
Process
Workshop
Class
Introduction
“Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once he grows up.” —Pablo Picasso
Chapter
001
Introduction
Brand
Process
Workshop
Class
Chapter
002
It’s all about encouraging one another to get more comfortable with the creative process. It took me a very long time to find words for this simple concept, because it is the core solution for several complicated issues. Firstly, people today rely heavily on the computer, in some cases in a good way while in others in a hindering way. Secondly, many people have become detached from their ability to create what was at one time considered simple daily tasks, like making healthy food, writing a letter, sewing buttons back on shirts. Now, many people no longer have these skills because technology has made them unnecessary to learn, but not having maintained them has had some negative repercussions.
1. The computer makes it possible to skip to the end. Stop and smell the roses…
2. There is so much joy in struggle and achievement, which is so easily found and practiced through simple and complicated creative tasks.
3. Computers may create cyber network and that is lovely but it better never replace the actual interaction between people, which is often enhanced by a shared activity, working independently or in a group on projects.
This thesis is the spring board to opportunities, more specifically teaching opportunities. I love graphic design for the problem-finding problem-solving process, and a big part of me uses this same methodology—albeit more sensitively—in many of the interactions I have with people.
I love working with people, encouraging and helping them with whatever it is they need help with.
I never claim to know everything, because that’s ridiculous. I believe in Socratic questioning, and more importantly I believe in the process of struggle. I look forward to the opportunity to teach, and I know to expect the unexpected. I’m ready.
I know for certain that this project has allowed me to explore what it is I am most passionate about; what makes me curious and keeps me excited. At the beginning I may not have had the words to explain what I wanted to investigate, but I had the idea in my mind.
I needed time to sift through my thoughts and figure out the core idea. What did I really want to talk about? What is it that I want to share with people. I know that technological progress is inevitable, and not the enemy. It is what pushes society along, and we are forever connected with it (hoping the internet doesn’t die). I am not against technology. However, I have noticed that, with the invention of the light bulb the world may have become brighter, but people on the other hand started becoming dimmer.
Over the years as our tools and technologies have become smarter, it has become a struggle for people to keep in step with it. We are distracted,
Chapter
003
and busy which can sometimes lead us into a state of mind I call Autopilot. Where you aren’t really driving you are just...going. You aren’t participating in your way of thinking in your process, and I want to shake it up.
So if the problem is that people have become disconn-ected from their processes, then the solution is getting them back together with them.
Now when I say process I mean the way someone arrives at a solution. To me it is very similar to what Craft used to mean to humans a long time ago. Each individual had a different way of doing things a different way of producing their trade. It was special to them and developed by them. They found pride and family reputation in their craft. I don’t see why we can’t re-connect with that definition.
Since everyone’s approach to process is different it is important to have an objective method to grade outcomes. Some people think similarly but more and more people think and learn in ways that standardized methods of teaching aren’t able to support. Instead of measuring outcomes by testing questions and answers you measure them by output. How many good ideas can you come up with? How many pages can you fill with your thoughts and feelings? I’d like to implement
grading based on the effort, growth and ability to reflect on 6 key categories of process which I will discuss in the Branding chapter.
An article from Newsweek (July 2010) says,
A recent IBM poll of 1,500 CEOs identified creativity as the No.1 ‘leadership competency’ of the future.
I have spent the last 5 years earning my MFA and the last 3 discovering a passion for creativity and a desire to learn, share and explore . I want to help bring creativity to the forefront of education and work in a place full of people that want to do the same.
Chapter
007
Introduction
Brand
Process
Workshop
Class
Process
“The noun of self becomes a verb. This flashpoint of creation in the present moment is where work and play merge.” —Stephen Nachmanovitch
Thesis D
evelo
pment
Jun–Aug SU 2
007
The His
tory
of C
raf t
Jun–Aug SU 2
008
At a Glance
1. Phil Hamlett DIRECTOR OF GRADUATE GRAPHIC DESIGN, AAU
Struggle to identify the main idea, but know it relates to inspiring people about hand skills and process.
FINAL = Creativity Kit, maybe a Workshop
2. Ivar Diehl MASTER BOOK BINDER, THE KEY BINDERY
Researched the history of craft and the current state of craft, and how the public can regroup and recommit to quality goods as well as quality life..
FINAL = The Craft Crusade (book)
3. Macy Chadwick BOOK ARTS INSTRUCTOR, AAU
Established book format, 50 to be printed by machine and 10 to be produced by hand. Contacted a writer to help organize the content I’d gathered.
FINAL = Craft Matters (New title) and prototype binding examples.
4. Michael Sainato INSTRUCTOR, AAU
After accepting I am not a writer, I decided the best direction for the content was a class course. I took surveys, and began meeting with the Faculty Development Department at the Academy of Art University to design a curriculum. based on the idea of: The importance of developing and understanding process/craftsmanship for designers.
FINAL = Working examples of Class materials/Curriculum
5. Dave Gottwald MENTOR & INSTRUCTOR, AAU
Introduce workshop as primary event, refine and produce all materials for class including an explanation of the entire thesis.
FINAL = Class materials/Curriculum and MFA Book
Chapter
008
Contem
porary
Book
Bindin
g
Sep–Dec FA
2009
Curric
ulum
Deve
lopm
ent
Jan–Jun SP 2
010
Finis
hing to
uches
Sept–Dec
FA 2
011
Officially, the journey of my thesis began at my Midpoint review, Spring 2007. I’d just finished my sixth class (GR: 600/Visual Communications Lab), and was headed for the Summer. In that class I had been given the opportunity to research one single topic of my choosing for the entire duration of the course. I decided to investigate the topic of Handmade. Why was it such a big deal at the time? With all the DIY out there and the confusion or stigma around the word “craft,” all I knew was that I loved making things by hand both for hobbies and for graphic design coursework. It was obvious I loved making things by hand but I felt shame in claiming the title of craft-er. Why did I feel shamed by my colleagues for these hobbies, and why didn’t graphic designers claim pride in their craft the same way craft-ers did? When did this split in definition of the word crafter occur, and how could it be reclaimed or fixed?
Obviously after this project I had only scratched the surface. I was still very uncertain about the exact form my thesis would take, but I knew what it would be about. I knew the word craft and all it’s sub-definitions would keep my interest for many years, if necessary.
“I’m an idealist. I don’t know where I’m going, but I’m on my way.” — Carl Sandburg
While at points I felt like i was aimlessly wandering, I was always producing research, reading books, asking people questions, keeping journals where
I was writing, drawing, making lists all in the pursuit of making sense of this huge idea. The idea that while technology is an integral part of our lives, constantly making things easier for us, it is also hindering our abilities. And a true creative person needs to feel strong on and off the computer. They need to master their own brain as their primary tool, and stop thinking the strongest tool in their box is the programs they use. Understanding the biological layout of their brains and how those play a part in their creative process. They need to understand how they work, intimately. Computers often mislead people by making them forget that they are the most valuable tool, and if you can’t use your brain well, what’s the point of jumping on the computer?
This journey I took to find my thesis turned into my process of finding what I love! Even after three years of this, I still love my thesis. It’s honestly important to me that it not just be a hypothetical project. I look forward to teaching these projects and exercises I have planned, and working with people to find their creative selves, be it in graphic design or something else.
These next few pages introduce you to my MFA process; the advisors I worked with, the amazing things I learned, the false directions I went down, and the final successes I arrived at. Yeah! Enjoy.
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Thesis DevelopmentRight after midpoint, it is strongly advised for students to take their first Directed Study, as a Group Directed Study with Phil Hamlett, the Director of graduate Graphic Design Academy of Art University. In this class I went several rounds with my topic, I and decided on the idea of an Inspirational Kit, and maybe a workshop.
The kit would be full of tools determined to be the best by votes from professionals and maybe even some celebrity designers. Just knowing you are using the same pencil and scissors as Paula Sher, might get you energized about using them. It would also come with a set of books which informed the recipient of helpful tips to get their creative juices flowing if blocked, or fun tips to help with divergent thinking (coming up with as many ideas as possible).
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I was still really struggling to hone in on the main idea: the elevator pitch, the one-liner, but I thought that would come with time and more research which I would conduct more intimately in the near future. In the meantime, I just wanted to make sure my proposed concept was suitable.
At this point in time, I remember being against the idea of the thesis becoming a curriculum mostly because that didn’t feel glamorous enough. It
seemed too easy, or obvious. Apparently, my gut was correct in thinking curriculum but my mind wasn’t ready to settle, so I continued my research and exploration looking for a different deliverable format for my information.
Chapter
013
The History of CraftAfter Thesis Development, I knew it was time to step up my research, and really get my hands dirty. I was put in contact with a master bookbinder with a rather strong opinion on “craft” and where it was going. Ivar Diehl and I began meeting weekly and having great conversations about “craft.” He was incredibly knowledgeable on the history of craft, from guilds and apprenticeships to different cultures’ unique skills, and how they
changed with the introduction of new technologies. He introduced me to several books where over and over I was seeing how technological advancements made life easier, faster, and cheaper but also meant traditional family skills stopped being passed on to the next generation, and valuable information was being lost.
I agreed with him that the word craft at one time meant pride in your family trade, it meant
Chapter
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quality, and it meant tradition. It had such a lovely connotation, which somehow became tarnished and redefined as kitch, cheap, and juvenile in today’s world. I wanted so badly to reclaim Craft, and restore it’s respectable reputation. It didn’t take long before he had me so deep into the idea of the Craft Crusade—as we called it—and I switched from a fun kit, maybe workshop, to a full length book. The book would discuss the
confusion and misconceptions around “craft,” include an historical run-down of craft and technology, and finally would conclude with a hopeful “get us back on the track” to quality goods and quality living.
Chapter
015
Contemporary Book BindingWhile continuing to work out the written portion of the book I decided to work with an advisor that could teach me how to produce it. I was going to design 10 books I would make by hand, and 50 which would be made through a printer to further demonstrate the differences between a hand-crafted experience and a machine-crafted one. The information would be identical but the hand crafted book would have textured papers, and elements with more tactile qualities. The digital
version would have high-res scans of the same pages. In order to do this I contacted and met with Tom Sheffield from Watermark Press to help with the digital version, while I met with Macy Chadwick, the Book Arts instructor at AAU weekly.
Macy introduced me to two other instructors at different art schools to get a better idea of what other school systems thought about craft. Barb Tetenbaum (Oregon School of Art and Craft) told
Chapter
016
me how the school used to be called Oregon school of Arts and Crafts, but had changed its name to shake the negative connotations associated with Craft. This was the same when I met and talked with Nance Obanion from California College of Art, formerly known as California college of Arts and Crafts. She said, “I believe the folks in admissions were having a hard time selling “Craft” to the parents of prospective
students who didn’t really understand the whole history of the College. They saw macrame and that was bad to them. I think, along with many others, that it was a dumb decision and would love to see the “C” come back.
Chapter
017
U-Turn to CurriculumAfter working with Macy I tried my hardest to finish writing the book. I hired a writer, and worked with her several weeks trying to flesh out the outline, but when it came down to it, I was just not a writer, and it was wrong to think I could figure it out in a semester or two. So after a lot of thought and conversations with advisors I postponed graduation in order to take one more advising session, hoping it would help me decide on the
best deliverable options for the huge amount of research I had grown to love, and been gathering for the past two years.
I can’t remember if it was the first or second meeting with MIchael Sainato but after hearing my ideas he advised me back toward a class curriculum. While pursuing information regarding the Craft book market for one class session we went to interview Michael Carrabetta, the director
Chapter
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at chronicle books. During that interview Mr Carrabetta seemed so energized about the idea of a class that refocused people on the basic tools that they currently overlook; pencils, hands, and their own brain. He exclaimed, “It’s like, Have you picked up a pencil lately?”
So began the reshaping of my book content into a class curriculum. I gladly began investigating how to go about creating a curriculum as well as solid
branding for a class instead of a book, meeting with the faculty development department and taking surveys to find out what students wanted to learn, and what professors, and professionals wished students learned more of.
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Finishing TouchesThis last term has been great. I knew Dave would be a great choice to work with because he has been a part of my Thesis process since I had to start thinking of the idea. He has been a friend along the way as the project has changed shapes and developed into a solid idea that just needed a solid form to back it up. So this term he has been doing his best to help direct me to completion. We didn’t have to waste time bringing him up to speed
on the topic so we could start right in on what needed to happen in order to bring this Thesis to life, and to make it ready for the masses. Week by week we have been able to chip away at the design while addressing holes in the concept.
One of the primary shifts Dave felt was important was to shift to focus from a class and make it about a workshop. This broadens the audience from students, to people that are interested in becoming
Chapter
020
more confident in their creative process. Initially I was sceptical but over a few weeks I accepted the change and now the Thesis is a weekend adventure where people reignite their creativity as well as a pretty sweet 16 week course.
Dave also persuaded my to change the title of the course to something more catchy and less...long. So it became Pencils before Pixels.
This project has been a long time coming but I feel like it is finally taking it’s shape and turning out to be good enough to submit for final review. Yeah.
Chapter
021
Brand
“Chance is always powerful. Let your hook be always cast; in the pool where you least expect it, there will be fish.” —Ovid
Chapter
025
Introduction
Brand
Process
Workshop
Class
Why the Pencil?The pencil is usually taken for granted but is no simple tool. Pencils are the fundamental tool for process. The steps in-between start and finish are put down, edited, erased, and redrawn. Preliminary ideas are ment to be replaced by a stronger better one (we hope). Some people prefer pens to do their doodles or ideating with, and that’s fine, but pens don’t have an erasure. The pencil on the other hand has been thought out and refined over many years and by many individuals.
Where do we use pencils? In school, maybe on crossword puzzles, definitely on math homework. Some artists use them to draw the first sketches before they apply a more permanent medium
like paint, ink, etc...get the idea? Pencils record a thought or idea that is meant to be expounded upon or stepped over, they accept this place in life with grace and patience.
Due to the pencils historical longevity, its connection to education, and it’s humble temporality I think it is a great symbol to represent the process of creating and refining an idea.
Chapter
028
Logo break downOstensibly the logo is the cross section of a pencil. The graphite center as well as the yellow painted hexagonal exterior represent the six categories of Benjamin Bloom’s Taxonomy, or the main steps in learning and education. According to Bloom there are three main categories in educating.
Cognitive: meaning your brain, your head, your mental ability, your knowledge.
Affective: how you are affected by things, your growth in feelings and emotions, your attitude.
Psychomotor: means mind and motion. This is basically where your head meets your motion or action, manual or physical skills.
When a person understands how these three things work within them, they understand their personal tool much better. Where they excel or struggle, gives them a leg up on the frustrations or false sense of success that come with the creative process.
These steps are further broken down into the six categories: Knowledge, Comprehension, Application, Analysis, Synthesis, Evaluation. These six looping steps are the model after which I have developed my curriculum and class exercises.
Chapter
029
1
Key action words for knowledge:
Define, describe, identify, know, label, list, locate, match, memorize, names, outline, recall, recognize, reproduce, recite, select, state
Knowledge is power! People are always, or should always be seeking to retain more and new information as well as experiences, to me it is the basic spice of life. Get spicy!
Recall data or information. Acquaintance with facts, truths or principles, as from study or investigation, or experience. What is it you bring to the table immediately. The cards in your deck, the ingredients in your kitchen, whatcha got?
Ways to demonstrate knowledge:
Recite a poem, quote lines in movies, sing a song from memory, define a favorite word, list your favorite words, describe the steps to playing checkers, name paintings you know in an art history book. Make a fact sheet. Make a time line of events. Write a let of any pieces of information you can remember.
Remembering
Chapter
032
2
Understanding the meaning, translation, interpolation and interpretation of instructions, problems, and solutions. The degree to with which you know something.
Ways to demonstrate comprehension:
Restate the rules of a game you were just taught, explain a complex task, convert moles, don’t use a calculator to do math, do you use a cook book or not when cooking a receipt. Cut out or draw pictures to show a certain event. Illustrate what you think the main idea was. Retell a story in your own words. Prepare a flowchart to illustrate a sequence of events.
Key action words for comprehension:
Convert, defend, distinguish, estimate, explain, generate, give examples, infer, interpret, paraphrase, predict, rewrite, summarize, translate
Comprehension to me is how well information sticks in your brain. How well you understand it, and perhaps how well you can communicate it to someone else, but not necessarily. At some point it maybe important to be able to communicate that information with someone else though.
Understanding
Chapter
033
To put to use, especially for a particular purpose. Use of a new concept in a new situation. Applying what was learned in the classroom into new situations in the work place or just...outside of the classroom! Ever heard, “Apply yourself!” well this is what they mean.
Ways to demonstrate application:
Redesign a promotional flyer using the exact same elements and materials. Organize multiple things into groups based on certain similarities, take a set of photographs to demonstrate a particular point. Make a papier-mâché map to include relevant information about an event. Make a diorama or model explaining a movie or play.
Key action words for application:
Change, compute, construct, demonstrate, discover, manipulate, modify, operate, organize, predict, prepare, produce, relate, show, solve, use
When you were a child you spent your whole day trying things, and usually failing. You quickly learn that when you cry whether hurt or not, odds are you get attention. You learned expressing pain, brought you attention, later when you want attention, you apply tears to get that attention even though you are not hurt. You may not know it but you are applying things all the time.
Applying
Chapter
034
3
Separate materials or concepts into component parts so that it’s organizational structure may be understood. When you understand what makes up the idea, structure, problem, or individual you can understand how it works and how it may work better.
Ways to demonstrate analysis:
Trouble shoot a printer by using logical deduction, listen to a girlfriend complain about her boyfriend ask her questions and find out what’s wrong with her relationship (don’t tell her what to do unless she asks).
Key action words for analysis
Breakdown, categorize, compare, classify, contrast, diagram, distinguish, deconstruct, differentiate, discriminate, identify, illustrate, infer, outline, relate, survey, select, prioritize
Analyzing can happen anytime. People often get stuck in the act of analyzing and never get to the next step. It is a very important step, but beware of what’s called Analysis Paralysis, which means you are analyzing so hard that you can’t move forward. I always imagine a fine toothed comb, and it feels so good to be patient and comb straight through something, but really there are usually tangles, and its easy to get stuck in the tangles. It’s how we deal with the tangles that is important.
Analyzing
Chapter
035
4
5
Make something from combining other elements. Put parts together to form a whole, with emphasis on creating new meaning.
Ways to demonstrate Creating:
Design your own calendar-sketch pad-organizer, write about your feelings in relation to something else, sell an idea, Create a new product, Make up a code or language, Write a poem or make those words into lyrics for a song.
Key action words for creating:
Categorizes, combines, compiles, composes, creates, devises, designs, explains, generates, modifies, organizes, plans, rearranges,
reconstructs, relates, reorganizes, revises, rewrites, summarizes, tells, writes
Creating is the act of making. This can be a complex or simple procedure. It can happen very quickly or take years, or even a lifetime. Creating can come naturally to some and be difficult for others. In this class we will find out where you stubble, and where you naturally take care of business. In the end though you will have a better understanding of yourself and your ability to create.
Creating
Chapter
036
6
Make judgments about the value of ideas or materials. Easy, right?
Ways to demonstrate Evaluating:
Select the most effective solution. Decide if the relationship you are in is worth it. Figure out which entrée you want when everything on the menu looks delicious. Pick out your clothes for an interview.
Key action words for Evaluating:
Appraises, assess, compares, concludes, contrasts, criticizes, critiques, defends, describes, discriminates, evaluates, explains, interprets, judge, justifies, rate, relates, summarizes, supports
Evaluating is tricky your brain has to be in two places at once. Which for some people can be very difficult, and frustrating. Having to decide if an idea is worth it is hard when your not sure what a worth it idea would be. But with some experience and confidence you learn to work through the process of sifting good ideas from great ideas, to even ideas you love, but just aren’t right for the current application.
Evaluating
Chapter
037
038
KEEP IT CLASSYNew Century Schoolbook is familiar to many in as being the typeface many first learned to read with.
Have You Picked Up A Pencil Lately?
New Century Schoolbook
A BCDEFGHIJK LMNOPQRSTU V W X YZ
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
0123456789 ! @ # $ %^&*()_
Sub HeaderNew Century Schoolbook: Bold Italic
A BCDEFGHIJK LMNOPQRSTU V W X YZ
abcdefghi jklmnopqrstuvwxyz
0123456789 ! @ # $ %^&*()_+
Bold CopyHelvetica: Bold
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUV WXYZ abcdefghijk lmnopqrstuvwxyz
0123456789!@#$%^&*( )_+
Body CopyHelvetica: Light
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUV W X YZ
abcdefghi jk lmnopqrstuvwxyz
0123456789!@#$%^&*()_+
Typography
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039
TRACE JOBThis typeface is based on the New Century Schoolbook family, but with a twist.
Chapter
042
Hand Drawn Type
Chapter
044
PMS 5763UC = 52 M = 39 Y = 73 K = 16
PMS 648U C = 90 M = 75 Y = 50 K = 51
PMS 7463UC = 75 M = 54 Y = 40 K = 16
PMS 1797UC = 13 M = 80 Y = 81 K = 2
PMS 7406UC = 13 M = 23 Y = 100 K = 0
PMS COOL GRAY 1UC = 8 M = 8 Y = 15 K = 0
Color Palette
Pencils Before PixelsREDEFINING CRAFT IN A DIGITAL AGE
It’s time to be fearlessly awesome.
Have you picked up a pencil lately?
Pencils Before PixelsREDEFINING CRAFT IN A DIGITAL AGE
1835 Clay Street Apt 403San Francisco Cali fornia 94109
Have you picked up a pencil lately?
STATIONARYOfficial envelope, Letter envelope, Pencils, Business Cards, Letterhead
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www.PencilsBeforePixels.com
www.LaurenMulkey.com
Pencils Before PixelsREDEFINING CRAFT IN A DIGITAL AGE
REDEFINING CRAFT IN A DIGITAL AGE
REDEFINING CRAFT IN A DIGITAL AGE
www.pencilsbeforepixels.com
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Get Digital
IPAD APPAllows participants access to all class materials as well as the ability to post written as well an inspirational content from anywhere they are.
Chapter
049
Pencils Before PixelsONE HECK OF A GOOD WEEKEND.
“Surround yourself with people who respect and treat you well.” —Claudia Black
Chapter
053
Introduction
Brand
Process
Workshop
Class
Chapter
056
FIRST LOOKWord of mouth, through AIGA, or through this mailer; the hope is that people jump online to check it out. 3 days 2 nights at a hip cozy hotel doing creative activities with awesome people. People that like process as well as innovation. People interested in discussing and listening, people that enjoy problem-finding and problem-solving. People will be surrounded by others that enjoy finding not just great ideas but the best ideas.
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PURPOSEThe mailer is meant to excite and inform. Aesthetically it focuses on the tools commonly used to design and create without the aide of the computer. This idea compliments the workshop’s goal of reintroducing each participant with their most powerful tools; primarily, themselves and not their computer.
Front
MAILER In the mail you will receive an exciting poster, meant to get you energized or at least curious about the phenomenal time you could have at a weekend workshop such at this one.
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Back
PRINTED FRONT AND BACKWhile the front looks good the back informs. Directing you to the website but also giving you a taste of what you would be in for.
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Chapter
065
Upon arriveUpon arrival at the hotel you will check in and receive not only your room key but also a PBP backpack full of helpful tools and gifts from our sponsors. Among the awesome goodies is your Workshop Notebook, which has everything you will need during the weekend such as schedule, daily tasks, and other helpful resources.
You will also receive your PBP T-shirt, T-square, schadler Rulers, Pencil and Erasure, and your post-it note napkin pad. Instead of writing on real napkins we just made it easier. With the post-it note napkin pad you still have that feeling of spontaneity with the function of the post-it.
YOU CAN BEA student, a teacher, a professional. Anyone that is interested in reconnecting with and igniting their creative process.
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The NotebookDesigned for every sort of creative person, the majority of the elements are left blank to let them decide the look and feel of the notebook, including the cover. This book will go everywhere with the them. It is a place to record thier thoughts, ideas and tidbits they don’t want to forget, phone numbers, business cards, anything. With an introduction written by Keri Smith the author of
Mess, and This is Not a Book, the feel of the book is anything goes. If you have ideas this is where you put them, good, bad or ugly.
TO BE KEPT IN MIND: 1. Trust in your imagination. It is the course of all true journeys. 2. Things are not always what they seem.
3. Anything can happen.
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DIFFERENT KINDS OF SPREADSVarious kinds of paper have been designed into the notebook to allow for multiple functions. Blank, gridded, angle gridded, lined, and half blank/half lined. Among these pages there are also folded/perforated assignment pages to be opened at the beginning of each specific workshop to ensure order and timing of information.
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SURPRISESEach assignment sheet is folded and perforated closed. Once the workshop session begins each attendee will open the corresponding assignment. Keeps things exciting and helps control the pacing of the exercises.
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THE COVERS Are designed to be “blank” so to allow the color and character of the books to be determined by the participant
HELPFUL STICKERS Each book comes with a set of colorful stickers with encouraging sayings as well as page edge stickers, to make finding special pages easier.
Chapter
The Workshop Experience
ListsThoughtsInner CriticRemindersFree-writingAnalyze
CollectGatherDoodleDiagramCut & PasteCollage
CritiqueGive tipsShareLearnRecommendEvaluateReflect
Workshopers are encouraged to focus on digging deep into understanding thier creative self.
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Attendee
Develop and produce a final piece that celebrates something they’ve learned about their creativity.
Separate materials or concepts into component parts so that it’s organizational structure may be understood.
Make something from combining other elements
Make judgments about the value of ideas or materials
Recall data or information
Understanding the meaning, translation, interpolation and interpretation of instructions, problems, and solutions
To put to use, especially for a particular purpose.
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Chapter
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Thursday5:30 PM – 7:30 PM Check-In/Registration7 PM – 8:30 PM Opening Reception Confusion around craft Physiological importance of Craft and Craftsmen historically. How that important connection is weakening due to technology. How that effects us psychologically How that effects our work/progress How we can get it back, or learn to maintain it better.
9 PM – 11:45 PM entertainment/bed time refreshments will be available for those who would like to stay and mingle, but it is also a good idea to get to bed early and be ready for tomorrow.
MIDNIGHT Lights out
Friday8 AM – 9 AM Breakfast 9 AM – NOON Workshop Set 1
1. REMEMBER What you already know Your experiences Your Biases Strengths weaknesses
2. COMPREHEND How do you learn and understand information best? What do you get hung up on? How can we work with that?
3. APPLY How do you try things out? How do you get ideas out? Do you have a method of organizing your thoughts Do you sketch? Write? collage?
NOON – 1:30 PM Lunch 1:30 PM – 4:30 PM Workshop Set 2
4. ANALYZE Are you able to distinguish between better and worse? Can you Categorize and differentiate well?
5. SYNTHESIZE If at first you don’t succeed. How many ways can you get that information back out, in different combinations? Build it, draw it...
6. EVALUATE Now that you have made something lets focus on how it went. Can you do it better? What’s going wrong what’s going right? How to take critique
6 PM – 7:30 PM Dinner 7PM – 11:45 PM Workshop Set 3 (Coffee, Cocktails and Tea Provided) Reflect Re approach Group Dialogue and Critique
MIDNIGHT Lights out
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Day by Day
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Saturday8 AM – 9 AM Breakfast 9 AM – NOON Workshop Set 4
IDEA PITCH Present what you came up with? Have a couple directions? What did you get stuck on? What are your concerns? How do we get around them
GROUP CRITIQUE Everyone grab a post it and write down your comments on each others projects
REVISE What are you considering from your peers? Why? What did they think of you hadn’t? How can you incorporate this into your project if you can?
NOON – 1:30 PM Lunch 1:30 PM – 4:30 PM Workshop Set 5 Work and complete Idea Take these three hours to work on your project Have a good time Discuss with your new friends If you are completed or satisfied with what you have produced spend some time walking around and looking at others projects.
6 PM – 7:30 PM Dinner 7PM – 11:45 PM Show Silent Auction Closing Reception Show your work Mingle Vote for your favorite Bask in the completeness
MIDNIGHT Lights out
Sunday
8 AM – 9 AM Breakfast Say good byes Exchange e-mail,and numbers and business cards
NOON Checkout
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Tor Helmer WORKSHOP ATTENDEE NO.124
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POLAROID EXPLORATION
Tor brought his own Polaroid and plenty of film to document the weekend, and ended up using it in his final piece. This set of lovely photos are an instant reminder for him to try to avoid getting caught up in the details, while still being able to appreciate them.
Adam Ward WORKSHOP ATTENDEE NO.67
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SPINNING SUCCESS
Difficulty focusing is often a problem for people, and this does not exclude creative people. Adam is one such character, and he found a brilliant way to find beauty in this often frustrating problem. Way to go Adam!
Annette Dalton WORKSHOP ATTENDEE NO.102
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A CALENDAR TO REMEMBER
Some attendees bring items they want to work with. In this case Annette brought some art that she’d been collecting and looking for a way to use them. Through her group discussions she made a great calendar set.
Sue Elliot WORKSHOP ATTENDEE NO.58
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NOT YOUR GRANDMAS SAMPLER
Sue is a worrier. She often got creative blocks early in her process and got so frustrated she would quit the project all together. This simple sampler was her playful solution to help remind her to not sweat the small stuff.
Pencils Before Pixels16 WEEKS OF UNIVERSITY COURSE FUN
“There is a vitality, a life force, an energy, a quickening, that is translated through you into action, and because there is only one of you in all time, this expression is unique. And if you block it, it will never exist through any other medium and will be lost.” —Martha Graham
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Introduction
Brand
Process
Workshop
Class
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The Process BooksThe goal of the course is to help each student dive deep into their own personal creative voice by focusing on their process. By taking the pressure off of a final project and help them find it if they don’t know what that is. Teach them the importance of keeping it healthy and happy, and how to handle or anticipate hang-ups that will inevitably come along during their creative process.
The process is divided between three books, so to really help dial into the different cognitive classes.
1. Work Book
2. The Inspiration Journal
3. Writing Journal Together these books represent the entire journey of the student’s class work and experience.
Recognize the importance of process
Critique ideas more efficiently
Identify your strengths and weaknesses
Draw/sketch your ideas more easily
Demonstrate your step by step “thought process”
Develop your creative process
Express the uniqueness of your process
Produce conceptual ideas
Differentiate between good ideas and great ideas
Organize your thoughts
Explain your craft and what that means
Evaluate ideas more accurately
Produce well-crafted final artifacts
Learning Outcomes THINGS YOU WILL KNOW AFTER YOU FINISH THIS CLASS
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To Remember THE RULES
1. Bring your workbook everywhere you go especially this class (you will know what this is in a bit).
2. Never leave home without a pen or other writing utensil.
3. Add anything to your workbook that you want.
4. At some point do something to the cover of your workbook to make it yours.
5. Check website weekly for assignments. www.pencilsbeforepixels.com
6. Review rules number 1 & 2.
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Place to allow the Rational voice (Left Brain) to practice without interrupting the creative voice (Right Brain).
Place for the inner creative (Right Brain) to play without judgment or restrictions from the inner critic (Left Brain).
Hold all assignments week by week. Also shows a calendar for the entire duration of the course. Allows the student to plan out their time and events.
Students are encouraged to focus on digging deep into understanding their creative self and process.
Student
The Course Experience
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Develop and produce a final piece that celebrates something they’ve learned about their creativity.
Separate materials or concepts into component parts so that it’s organizational structure may be understood.
Make something from combining other elements
Make judgments about the value of ideas or materials
Recall data or information
Understanding the meaning, translation, interpolation and interpretation of instructions, problems, and solutions
To put to use, especially for a particular purpose.
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wk_01WHERE IS YOUR HAPPY PLACE? FIND IT!
Helping each individual identify which physical and mental spaces help or hinder their productivity.
wk_02 FIGURING OUT WHO YOU ARE
By taking time to identify what is important to them they have a foundation to work from, and keep in mind while exploring things outside of themselves.
wk_03 DEVELOPING A SENSE OF POWER
If last week was ment to establish the foundation of the self, this week we find the fuel for that fire, passion. Embrace what it is that moves you, and act upon it.
wk_04* DEVELOPING A SENSE OF INTEGRITY
Who else is going to do it for you? No one. So let’s figure out what makes you a unique individual and get proud about that. This way you are whole and undivided and can stand strong for what you feel.
wk_05 OPEN-MINDED, POSSIBILITIES ARE ENDLESS
Creative block will happen, and this week we learn the important of keeping an open-minded, even when it’s the hardest thing to do. It’s always worth it.
wk_06 REFLECT ON YOU COLLECTION
Time to reflect on the last 5 weeks and what you have learned and gathered, any highlights? Something you’d like to investigate more? Well time to start thinking of a final project idea, so take advantage!
wk_07 MIDTERM: BRING IT ALL TOGETHER
Midterm week! Now that you have reflected it’s time to pitch your ideas? What is it you want to investigate further? Take advantage!
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Week by Week
* = Progress grade
The sixteen week program in broken into three segments:
GATHER COLLECT & OBSERVE (Seven weeks)REFLECT & RE APPROACH (Three weeks) CONVERGE & REFINE (Six weeks)
The first segment’s tasks focus on helping the student develop a strong creative foundation mentally and physically. By giving them many simple tasks with no wrong answer they get used to letting go of the outcome and just focusing on the gathering and the exploring. They should stop focusing on the results and just enjoy the activity. By the end of the first seven weeks they should be able to look back and be pretty impressed with the amount of content they have gathered. Yes, a lot of it will be just process, but hopefully at least one or a couple of the tasks were interesting, and sparked their curiosity so much so that they want to take it further, and start developing an ideal for the final.
The second segment is three weeks of reflection and re approach. The students will reflect on the past 7 weeks and start to reevaluate some of the tasks they accomplished. Through several iterations of class critique in addition to personal reflection, by the tenth week the student should have a good idea of what they would like to investigate and potentially produce for a final piece.
The last segment of six weeks is a time for the students to design and produce their final pieces as well as finish their process journals.
By the end of the course each student will have a self directed final piece as well as three bound journals, reflecting their creative process.
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wk_08* DEVELOPING A SENSE OF STRENGTH
Coming to the realization that no matter what limitations or blocks you encounter you’re confident in your abilities to work through it is an incredible point of personal strength, lets find it.
wk_09 GIVE YOUR SELF A BREAK
More often then not, as a creative, you are your worst enemy, your worst critic. If that’s the case this week we take a look at how to give yourself a break. You deserve it.
wk_10DEVELOPING A SENSE OF SELF-PROTECTION
If you are worth a break you are also worth defending. By identifying distractions you are able to protect your productivity.
wk_11 IT’S ALL ABOUT BALANCE
How’s it going in there? It’s up to you to know what’s going on in there and keep your self happy, Giving yourself time to play and work is an incredibly important and difficult thing to master. So we will practice.
wk_12* DEVELOPING A SENSE OF TRUST
At this point you have covered a lot of personal ground. One of the last steps is trusting the process and practicing it. Creativity requires receptivity and profound trust. Avoid sabotage, let go of trying to control everything, identify blocks in your path, have the courage to follow what it is you want to do and maybe are afraid of achieving. Admit it, accept it, work with it.
wk_13GETTING AND GIVING THE CRITIQUE
Learning to give can be just as hard as learning to get. Criticism is problem-finding as well as problem-solving. Getting good at these skills are invaluable.
wk_14LEARNING TO WRANGLE IDEAS
So we have two weeks left and depending on your work load you may be fine or you maybe struggling. If you are struggling let’s work together to get to the bottom of the issue and keep you moving forward.
wk_15FINISHING TOUCHES
Obviously this is your final week to complete your lovely ideas. Ideally you are nearly there, but in some cases you may have a ways to go. Try not to let anything get you down, focus, find your happy place and keep going.
wk_16* CELEBRATE AND CONGRATULATE
You have reached the end of this course. Today please bring your final project, your three process books, all tertiary materials you have gathered through the projects that you couldn’t fit in your books.
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1. The WorkbookYou could think of this book as your brain on paper. A place to collect and document ANYTHING you want to remember. It is also a resource. Your very own reference material that will contain your unique thoughts, visions and ideas of the world.
It will be different from any other book in the world because you are unique, and you are the designer. You can add to it or change it at any time. It changes as your perception of the world changes. It is portable. Perfect for taking with you; have spontaneous showings wherever you are). You can reference your thoughts whenever you want or when you need ideas.
Take this wherever you go (all the time, to the mall, to work/school, on vacation). You do not have to travel to far away places to take interesting notes or to observe interesting things. You do not need large amounts of time either. Amazing things happen all the time and in the blink of an eye. You just have to be looking for them and ready to record what you observe.
The following pages include a variety of projects and exercises that will guide you during this course. There is also a section to help you get acquainted (or reacquainted) with some tools and terms you will need to be familiar with. Remember, all of your most important tools exist in your body! Use them. And remember to have fun.
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CALENDARPrinted blank, to be filled with the current date that takes place during the class will take place. This makes a great chronological record of the students activities and happenings.
BLANK SPACEAll this blank space is for thoughts, quotes, appointments, ticket stubs, doodles, mementos... anything the student might like to keep track of.
WHAT YOU CAN’T SEEEach workbook has the syllabus printed in the front as well as the professors phone number and e-mail. I encourage students to correspond with me directly when ever needed.
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TIP IN ASSIGNMENTSEach weekly assignment is a half sheet tipped into each spread. This way the students can look ahead and plan, but they won’t get the full lecture. At least they will have record of the homework due each week.
WIRE-OSince this is a workbook it will often be open on a surface somewhere. Wire-O binding allows it to lay comfortably flat so the student don’t have to fight with it, we design to help not hinder
MONTH TO MONTHAt the right of every spread there is a place to mark the month as well.
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Tip insAssignments come in the form of Tip ins. Each week has a half sheet bound with in it. Those sheets have a short introductory paragraph that focuses on the topic for the week. After the paragraph follows the In Class activities and After Class activities. The After Class activities are broken into two categories; the activities the student should record in the Written Journal and the activities to be recorded in the Inspiration Journal.
Each week the class discusses how one or several of Bloom’s Taxonomy categories of learning are present within the assignments. Working through any challenges they maybe encountering throughout the exploration of their creative processes.
wk_01/15WHERE IS YOUR HAPPY PLACE? FIND IT!
Creative people need space to work, both mentally and physically. This week we are going to focus on finding these spaces for you.
When it comes to mental space, it is important to have support. Unfortunately, this can be really hard to find, or even ask for. You’d like to think there would be an abundance of support from your families and everyone around you, but this isn’t always the case. As new creatives, it is important to have your attempts and efforts acknowledged just as much as your achievements and successes. Hopefully you are surrounded by those kinds of people, but if you aren’t you need to be prepared to find it elsewhere. If you are going to be successful, you need to establish a positive creative space to which you can call on often.
When it comes to physical space, this can be your desk, a coffee shop, the library, the laundry mat, a working studio. There may or may not be music playing, other constant noises or a TV on? Whatever the case maybe, it’s important to establish where you work well, and where you don’t
work well.
This week we begin your creative discovery. You may feel both giddy or defiant, hopeful or skeptical. The tasks, and exercises aim to help you establish a location or several where you are able to explore without fear or reservations.
IN CLASSWarm up Go over course materials Get out early to gather supplies! Don’t get used to it.
AFTER CLASS• Get your supplies on! • Sign Contract
WRITTEN
• Inventory: Make a list of items you own. Beside each item put a quantity of the particular item. • Everyday write at least one page, stream of consciousness (don’t read them) INSPIRATIONAL
• Daily contribution: Each day collect something lovely and store it in this book. Cut and paste till it’s full, no seriously, by the end of the course it needs to be full, and turned in for grading! • Map: Create a map based on some part of your everyday life. Your desk, your commute to school or work, your dinner table, your hand. Draw it, diagram it, record it somehow.
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3. Writing JournalPeople that come up with ideas for a living have to deal with two kinds of thinking; divergent and convergent. Divergent is thinking of many ideas and then convergent is distilling that idea into one single idea. They need to be able to think of all ideas and then find the best idea out of those ideas. This is a very difficult thing to do. Often people suffer from analysis paralysis trying to do both at the same time. No idea sounds good enough to pursue. So in the beginning it is best to treat them as totally separate steps in the process.
This book acts as a stage for the inner critic. The inner critic is the Left brain, it is the analyzer, it is sometimes a very ruthless energy that tears down any attempt at creativity. While it doesn’t have a place during the divergent thinking part, it does have an important role during the convergent thinking. So these pages are a place to give it the microphone, let it say it peace and then calm down to allow the creative energy to flow, and be collected in the inspiration book. By splitting the activities up in this way the student gets better and dividing their creative energy/process into more efficient steps. It is a place to vent, to free-write, and to complete written assignments from the class. This book too needs to be filled cover to cover with only written content, and will be checked for progress at each grade
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2. The Inspiration JournalThis book acts as a place where the student’s inner creative is encouraged to play in a safe place. When you can practice this, it gets easier to recognize that energy for what it is, as opposed to the more critical voice that sometimes can take over your creative process. In these pages anything that inspires can be gathered and collected. You can try things and take risks free of judgement. You can fill the pages with anything; clippings from magazines, clothe samples you like, paint chips from the hardware store...anything but by the end of the term the entire book needs to be filled cover to cover.
The book is meant to be brought to class everyday, and I will be checked for progress at the four grading classes. The format is 8.5” by 11” and matches the size of the other two process books. It is blank but for the introduction pages, page numbers, and the branding from page to page. This allows the student to again add the character through their process no matter what it maybe.
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Home PageIt is important that this class embrace technology while focusing on the creative process. A website will create a cyber presence where anyone that has seen the url can visit to find out more. The home page shows current events; where the next workshops will be held and which schools are teaching the course. It also shows guest speakers, and showcases students/attendee work from recent classes and workshops.
The website acts as a hub for people to come and see what is happening no matter where they are located. All they need is internet access.
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About meThe website also has a page where people can find out about me. A place there I can let them know why I love doing this. Whether they are a student, parent, potential employer or workshop attendee I want my credentials and reasons for teaching to be readily available.
I also think this would be beneficial because of my energy for helping people figure out their creative process. I think personal creative process has an incredibly fascinating story from historical Craft
guilds and apprenticeships to the introduction of Industrial Revolution, and how that changed the craftsman to a mechanic and technician. When making things by hand was not a hobby but it was a source of personal pride and tradition. Humans used to gain self-confidence and worth from how they did what they did. Today, I want to help people regain that feeling of pride in their own creative processes.
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Don’t forget to loginThe online site also has a place for people participating in either the workshop or course to login. In addition to the workshop and the course people can download the Pencil Before Pixel App and take the class totally digitally, with other people that have signed up. This will be discussed further in the App section but is important to mention now that this is a place where those people can also keep track and see what others are doing. By making the entire class available
in several forms (ie: Workshop, In class Course, Online, and on App) just covers the gamut of possibilities, and really gives the audience the chance to give the subject a life all it’s own.
For example it would be amazing if the focus was more on the App, and Online course because it was so popular it didn’t rely on the Workshop and Class. Yes, the likely hood of that happening is slim, but hey, I’m optimistic.
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To buyIt is important to also support our sponsorships, and promote quality tools. We have given out many surveys asking people which tools specifically are their most helpful. Here on this sight we make available for purchase the top three most popular tools from each category we gave. So people can custom create their very own portable design kit from a selection of the most recommended tools.
In addition to general tools there are also some branded goods from PBP. Such as a t-shirt, backpack, and iPad Cover branded with the logo. We are pretty proud of what we do and love to see people sporting our stuff.
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Displaying all the weekly assignments as well as the current one. Perhaps you want to go back and review something, totally allowed. However, if you want to skip ahead, Nope, each week a new assignment is unlocked, thus controlling the release of information and keeping things a surprise!
WelcomeAny one that wishes to use an iPad or would like to try, is able to purchase the Pencils Before Pixels App at the App store. Once you have loaded the app then you are off. The welcome page displays the week by week buttons for easy access to which ever session you would like to look up. It also shows what you have been posting recently as well as what your classmates have been posting. Since the iPad has the ability to take photographs or even paste found images from the web, this is a great way to collect and show off the cool things you may want to share with the class.
Post-it-allIn the Post-it-all section you are able to take photos, and then see them all at a good size on the screen. You may also make captions to go along with your images. This is a larger more focused version of what you can find as far as image display goes from the welcome page. This page however also shows what your classmates have been taking pictures of.
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Get inspiredJust like the in class course, the students are responsible for gathering inspiration. In this section you get a larger view of the images you have collected that inspire you, as well as the ability to drag and drop them in a certain order or to batch them into certain categories.
Shown at the top the dots represent one of the 16 weeks which make up the course. This allows you to see which photos you uploaded for which week and how they apply to the assignments for the corresponding week.
Chat-it-upIn order to encourage critique and correspondence between classmates or just free participants there is a Constant chat box. When you sign up for the class you are run through dialogue boxes to set up your course. One of these lets you set up your chat to talk with everyone, or those starting at the same time as you. This way you can share images, and tips with everyone else taking the course.
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Within the App there’s even a place to keep track of your thoughts, just like the written journal for the course. It keeps track of what you write every week allowing you to review it whenever you like.
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HALL POSTERSSent to participating schools, these three posters will help spread the word and excitement about the course.
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