Photography
| Photojournalism | | Photographers and Collections of Photographs |
Photojournalism
This 1-page teacher guide offers questions for students who are analyzing a photograph. From the U. S. Library of Congress, requires Adobe Reader for access.
In this lesson plan from the New York Times, "will consider the contexts in which photographs are taken and create original photo essays on topics of their choice."
Students examine several iconic photographs and those featured in the Times Lens blog to generate criteria for what makes for a great photograph. They then use a selected Lens post as a model to create their own photo essays for exhibition in a classroom show.
Tips for what is and isn't acceptable in editing, writing captions, more.
Students consider Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalism and photograph-based iconic images, such as Shepard Fairey's poster of Barack Obama. They then develop their own photo-based images and write artists' statements and photograph analyses.
In this lesson, to commemorate the seventh anniversary of the Iraq war, students look at and respond to photos of fallen soldiers' bedrooms. They then create and present creative photo essays.
Contests, scholarships, and other resources for members.
15 tips from photographer Dan Marin.
Students use photos from the American Memory collection to explore techniques, rationale, and bias in war photos.
This page takes visitors through the steps in determining a photograph's (in)authenticity.
Syllabus for an 18-week photojournalism class, rich with links to resources.
Four photographers discuss their shots of the man who stopped a line of tanks June 5, 1989, at Tiananmen Square in Beijing.
Tips with sample pictures.
Photgraphers and Collections of Photographs
Sponsored by Kodak, this site supports the PBS video. The Features section includes essays on photography as art, photography and war, manipulation/distortion of images, presidential image-making, advertising and persuasion, social change, and cultural identity. The Image Lab presents additional exploration of photography as a communications medium.
An online exhibit of celebrating "the exuberance and inventiveness of American amateur photographers."
Students read an article and view a slide show of the photography of Henri Cartier-Bresson, famous for capturing the "decisive moment." They establish criteria for evaluating photos, take photos capturing decisive moments, and critique their own and others' photos.
Helen Johns Kirtland was a war photojournalist active at the end of World War I. She was the "the first and only woman correspondent allowed at the front after Caporetto, the 1917 Italian retreat in which 275,000 troops were captured."
A collection of outstanding photographs sponsored by the Smithsonian American Art Museum. Includes links to other excellent collections of photography.
"Lens is the photojournalism blog of The New York Times, presenting the finest and most interesting visual and multimedia reporting 聴 photographs, videos and slide shows."
Part of
Time
magazine's Web site, this page links to photo essays by their photographers, including pictures of the week.
Photos by Alfred Eisenstaedt, including the iconic shot in Times Square on V-J day, 1945.
Follow links for an overview of the women and their work from the late 1800s to the present.