Tag Archives: ireland

Virtual Collaboration

I’m here in the town hall in Claremorris, hidden up on the balcony watching our school musical ‘Hairspray’ and typing this blog post. It’s fitting that while looking at the results of an incredible collaboration between staff and students, I’m also thinking about how easy online collaboration is and how much easier it’s made my life as a teacher.

Every year we participate in the Concern Debates, but finding the time to tease out the subtleties of each motion; to divide up the topic between the four speakers; to edit and re-edit the speeches and yet leave enough time to learn them off – all of this is a real challenge. Last year however, we started using an online learning environment and seriously, it’s made my life so much easier. The team pick a time that suits them – let’s say Tuesday evening at 9pm – then we all log on and tease out how we’re going to approach the motion. Everyone can ‘talk’ at once and still achieve loads; we can send each other links to relevant articles online; the team can post their speeches; critique each other’s work; anticipate opposing arguments and generally make the kind of progress that simply isn’t possible during a half hour meeting at lunch!

We use www.edmodo.com which is basically like facebook for education. Some of the time I take part but increasingly I feel like the team don’t really need me (which is great: independent learning is where it’s all at if you ask me!). Getting closer to the debate they can work together from the comfort of their own homes every evening. Honestly, I don’t know how we ever managed to take part in the debates without it. So at the risk of giving away the secret of our modest success so far (we’ve got one victory under our belts!) can I suggest that if you’re doing the debates and NOT using an online forum, you need to jump on this bandwagon pronto.

Setting up an account is instant: go to www.edmodo.com, click on “I’m a teacher”, create a group (we’ve given ours the very original label “Debating”), give the code to students, then they create an account using this code and voila, you’ve got an online classroom up and running. You can also give the code to any interested students who didn’t make the debating team or who decided they want to help but don’t want to actually speak out loud in public. Once the group is full you can change the code to prevent randomers from crashing the party (in a virtual sense!).

The possibilities are endless. I use edmodo for all of my class groups, so do the Claremorris coder dojo group and I’m told there are GAA teams and community groups up and down the country using it too. You don’t need to use edmodo though – I don’t want to come across like they’re my sponsor or something! Google docs works – I read a blog post recently from a proud dad whose son and his mates were using google docs to collaborate on a feature length film script! Twitter could work too if you used a hash tag specific to your group but this would be a very public way of preparing for a debate 😉 And hey, with class sizes getting bigger all the time, corrections piling up, CPD and Croke Park hours, anything that helps us to use our time more efficiently is a god send. If you want to know any more send me a message by clicking the feedback button on the left side of this page.

INOTE conference

How was it? Exhilarating and exhausting, inspiring, demanding and just very occasionally a little bit depressing.

After three and a half hours on the road in the company of Mark Kermode and the BBC philharmonic orchestra celebrating 50 years of James Bond, I finally arrived in Kilkenny. Somehow, however, I’d missed the email which told us that Clare Keegan would be doing a reading, so my copies of her brilliant short story collections “Antartica” and “Walk the Blue Fields” were left sitting on my bookshelves. Oh well, I still got to meet her and it was fascinating to hear her speak about the craft of writing so honestly and so eloquently. She spoke of the intensity required of the short story but also of the quiet observation of reluctant narrators which needs to happen before you’ll create anything worth reading. And she spoke also of the process of writing and re-writing, of revisiting the characters over and over again until what they are doing rings true and reveals who they really are. But quietly. Somehow you get to know them in silence not noise and I wondered how often our students do this? Visit and revisit draft after draft until they have crafted something to truly be proud of. Certainly they never get this opportunity in an exam which gives them only 1 hr 20 minutes. That’s why I generally recommend that students avoid the short story, not in life, but in the exams. In the real world I run a short story competition every year because I want my students to know the pleasure of crafting a beautiful piece of writing and of seeing their work in print but the brutal demands of writing a really good short story in such a short timeframe in an exam is something I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy.

Meanwhile I’ve bagged myself a signed copy of Foster that I’m dying to dive into but chance would be a fine thing! I often hear people commenting how family-friendly teaching is as a job, but right now it doesn’t feel like that. Last Wednesday I didn’t see my daughter at all as I was away with students at our first Concern debate; Thurday I was home late after work and there in body but not in spirit for the rest of the evening as I was distracted preparing for the conference; Friday I was in Kilkenny and when I got back late Saturday night the house was quiet and everyone was in bed. Today Sunday I’ll be at the school musical dress rehearsal and I’ll be at there again for matineees and evening shows Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. These past few days have been so crazy I still haven’t met my beautiful little niece Clíona (born last Wednesday) and it’s hard not to feel guilty and overwhelmed. I’ve also got a stack of personal essays from my leaving certs that need correcting but right now it just feels like somethings gotta give. Still, mid-term is fast approaching so I’ll get some balance back then. And maybe even get a chance to actually read “Foster”…

Saturday began with our keynote speaker’s observation that ‘success for English teachers is not defined by A1s but how many future readers we inspire’. So far, so obvious. Sadly, the rest of her talk was a rambling rant at everyone in the room, accusing us of teaching to the exam, of not encouraging students to read widely, criticising us for the selection of texts on the list of prescribed material. She generally seemed convinced that all English teachers are complete and utter failures. She spoke of her experience in school of being given out to for reading something that wasn’t on the course and for only the second time in half an hour I could connect with something she was saying – I too was given out to at school for reading instead of ‘studying’ and it stuck with me. That’s one of the reasons I became a teacher. That’s the reason why my TY’s are in the throes of setting up their own book club, and the first years are taking part in the MS readathon and the entire staff are on board with the drop and read initiative. I think what made me saddest of all was the way she sucked the energy and enthusiasm out of the room and patronised a wonderful group of people who passionately love what they do enough to have gotten up at 5 and 6 am to drive to a conference for which there will be no recognition (the Dept tell us to do CPD but refuse to recognise it when calculating Croke Park hours). She spoke of inspiring people but if that was her version of inspiration, in my humble opinion, she’s got a lot to learn.

Thankfully, things picked up once we got stuck into the workshops. I was presenting on some practical ways that teachers can integrate more ICT into their teaching (you can read some of those tips here) and once I got into the swing of it my nerves melted away. I pointed to the confluence of factors which so profoundly accererated my journey to integrating technology in my classroom- teaching in a school with zero discipline problems; grappling with severe laryngitis; desperately needing to find a way to communicate with my pupils without using my voice; having an IT technician on hand 24 hours a day every time I ran into difficulties (my husband John). In the end we decided that this is the vital missing factor in schools and the motto for my talk became “everyone needs a John!”. Meanwhile, thanks to the wonderful John I’ve completed chapter one of the paper one book I’ve been threatening to write for the past year – if you want to download the pdf and photocopy any of it for use in class click here: (Bible w cover)

Just before lunch, Colette Kearney offered incredibly wise words on Literacy and Learning Support and Tony Tracey gave a fascinating and in-depth analysis of Blade Runner. I caught some of both once I’d finished answering questions and queries and bouncing ideas off other teachers. After both sessions and at lunch I had great inspiring conversations with some really vibrant and enthusiastic English teachers and I’ve made some great new connections, something that is so vital in teaching, a profession that can seem so lonely at times. I was only sad that presenting meant that I missed the wonderful workshops by Fiona Kirwin, Delmot Bolger (really sad about this one! I have a thing for writers…), Frances Rocks and Edward Denniston. Then we launched into our AGM with a heated and passionate discussion of the new Junior Cert, focusing most particularly on the abuses of the system which can occur when teachers grade their own pupils. The general consensus seemed to be that maintaining any kind of national standard will be impossible; that assessing our own pupils will profoundly damage our relationship with them (we want to be advocates not judge and jury); that the lack of information about who will design the new English curriculum and what it might look like is profoundly worrying and frustrating; and yet there remain many things to be excited about  – for me, I’m particularly enthused about the short courses in Digital Literacy and Artistic Performance. Nonetheless, the suggestion that these changes aren’t a cost saving exercise was met with a gale of laughter.

After a second round of workshops and a drink in the bar it was back on the road again. My phone kept beeping and when I pulled over in Athlone for a McFlurry with the lovely Elaine Dobbyn I was delighted to see some of my workshop attendees already giving twitter a go. To me these connections are what give us the energy and the drive to keep going despite the obstacles and the challenges and the perception we were subjected to earlier in the day that we daily fail our pupils. For me our greatest success lies in the fact that we care passionately about doing the best job we can possibly do for our students. Everything else is silence.

INOTE notes

ICT for Technophobes

Step 1: Use what’s already there!

Google – do a search & a list of search options will appear along the left side of the page.

Find exactly what you need by clicking on:

  • Images

  • Videos

  • News

  • Pages from Ireland

  • More search tools – reading age (click on “web” to find “more search tools”)

YouTube – if searching in class, you can scroll down to the very bottom of the page, you can select “safety” and turn it to “on” to avoid inappropriate content popping up.

Wikipedia – find languages on the left hand side and select “simple English”.

Also, students may find wikiquote useful for writing essays.

Websites I may have mentioned at the conference:

Check if they’re blocked by your school filter – every school seems to be different! We have 2 lines in to the school, one unfiltered for teachers & a filtered one for students.

Developing vocabulary and grammar awareness:

www.wordhippo.com

www.knoword.org

www.rhymezone.com

www.kwarp.com/portfolio/grammarninja

Timing exercises:

www.online-stopwatch.com

Creating online newspapers from word documents:

www.issuu.com (might be blocked by school filter)

Speeches and talks on every topic under the sun:

www.ted.com

Photography:

http://www.worldpressphoto.org/

Step 2: Learning from other teachers:

Reading, writing, listening and speaking are the skills we want students to develop – using audacity develops their listening and speaking skills as well as their digital literacy. Also, they can all be talking at once and still achieving something! Which is nice!

Download audacity – go to www.audacity.sourceforge.net

You will also need to install www.lame.sourceforge.net – all files need to be saved as mp3s and this allows you to do it.

Most students (and adults including me!) I’ve come across are programmed to always choose “file save as”. However, if you do this with an audio file it will save as just so much gobbledigook! Instead you need to train them (and yourself) to select “file, export as mp3”.

Remember, having audacity on your computer isn’t enough, you also need lame which encodes the sound waves as mp3s.

More advanced tips:

I’ve noticed that it can be very slow when students are trying to upload recordings they’ve made to edmodo. Our tech guy figured out that we had a very high download rate on our school internet but a very slow upload rate so he contacted the people who provide our internet and balanced it out better.

If you have your own blog and want to embed audio files, you need someone to host your audio online. I use www.soundcloud.com – they have hours of free audio hosting before you hit the limit, after which you have to pay money to upload any more (or you could just create a second account!)

Step 3: Set up a blog

Setting up a blog is easy. Figuring out how to create categories, add tags, photos, videos etc is a little more time consuming! The blog platforms I see teachers using the most are

www.wordpress.com

www.edublogs.org (however I heard a rumour recently that they no longer host videos)

www.weebly.com

www.blogspot.com

Basically running a blog helps you and your students to be more organized. Everything you (and they) need is sorted into categories and available at the click of a button. Blogging also helps you to realize that the content is everywhere – so it’s really what we get our students to DO with the content that matters. Other advantages include less time standing at a photocopier and less panic as exams approach as your notes are available anytime, anywhere to anyone. Oh, so you do have to be OK with sharing your notes…

10 blogs being run by English teachers in Ireland:

http://www.sccenglish.ie/ Julian Girdham is the King of blogging and if you haven’t discovered his site yet you’re in for a treat! He’s here today and presented on ICT at iNOTE last year; search his site for incredible resources on this and everything English related.

http://calasanctiusenglish.blogspot.ie/ Elaine Dobbyn, former NUIG Lit n Deb head recently returned to her native Galway and is now blogging from Oranmore – great posts, links and tips. (She’s involved in INOTE and is here at the conference – if you see her do say ‘hi’).

http://dgsenglishdept.blogspot.com/ Formerly the responsibility of the aforementioned Elaine Dobbyn, this blog has passed into the very capable hands of Louise Donohoe who is blogging up a storm since September (she’s here at the conference somewhere too I’m told! Hello!)

http://meighan.edublogs.org/ This blog is full of really great observations, quotes, posts and links from Laura Meighan who teaches in Gormanstown. She once gave me a lift to the train station in Dublin. As a culchie from Mayo I really appreciated it!

http://juliecullen.weebly.com/5th-year-blog.html Julie Cullen is one of those teachers I’d never have gotten to know if it wasn’t for Twitter – she runs a great blog with different sections for each year group which has loads of ideas, posts, links.

http://6thyearenglish.tumblr.com/archive Katie Molloy’s blog for her 2012 Leaving Cert class is now archived but there’s still a serious amount of really valuable resources available here. (Katie’s here today too – hi Katie!)

http://collegebookclub.weebly.com/index.html Another great blog with heaps of resources for teaching English from Eve Roche, also in attendance today. Hi Eve!

http://newenglishirl.blogspot.ie/ I had to take to twitter to uncover the mystery identity of the teacher running this blog – his name is Eoghan Evesson. And this is a blog you don’t want to miss!

http://bccnsenglish.com/ Also run by a teacher/teachers I haven’t yet had the pleasure of meeting in person; some excellent resources and links here.

http://5j2012msgreville.wordpress.com/category/english-education/ Run by Natasha Greville, this site includes some great posts about teaching as well as lots of useful resources for English.

And there’s my blog www.leavingcertenglish.net

Step 4: Make connections

Join twitter to connect with other English teachers to swop ideas, resources & occasionally to whinge about the corrections you have piling up! Also, every Monday evening there’s a discussion on education issues on twitter. You don’t even need an account to follow what’s going on (referred to as lurking!) – just search for #edchatie or @fboss (he moderates brilliantly – he’s a former Art teacher who works for the NCTE).

If you can go to the CESI conference in February and/or the ICT in Education conference in Tipperary IT in May. Contact CESI on www.cesi.ie

10 English teachers (based in Ireland) to follow on Twitter:

@evelynoconnor @sccenglish @Elaine_Dobbyn

@brighidcannon @cullej29 @tashagreville

@ConnollyTrevor @newengblog @levdavidovic @portenglish

Step 5: VLE: There are lots of options out there.

Moodle is the most popular in Irish schools but you need someone in your school to do the techie bit and set it up. It costs a small amount of money so you’d need a few teachers on board to justify it.

www.icsgrid.ie Schools pay per user for this VLE but the courses are already set up for you in all of the major subject areas for both Junior and Leaving Cert.

www.edmodo.com – this is the one I use. I’ll be showing you this in action at the conference.

Make sure you do a quick survey of all students to see if they have internet access, how reliable it is, if they have to share one computer with many siblings. You’ll also need an ‘acceptable use policy’. Let parents know you’re using it in case they have any concerns.

Step 6: Create resources

To increase motivation make each group responsible for one aspect of the course. Tell them the Junior Certs are relying on them to create good resources for them to revise with (this may or may not work!). I generally go with groups of four.

If you buy flipcams don’t get ones with AA batteries – make sure they’re plug-in-able!

Step 7: Share with other teachers!

It’s kind of obvious but if we shared resources and ideas more we’d all have less to do!

UPDATE:

Some more English teachers to follow on twitter – hope you don’t mind me outing you but if anyone does, send me an email and I’ll take you off the list! @Reve111 @NecieDon@susandhealy @ecenglish13 @gerinclare @Bcs_historydept @ClassiebawnKarl @treasanc @Kate_e_Ryan @DavidClarkeDub @KieransEnglish @gemmacorcoran3 @rsbeaver @RuthRkelly @GerADoyle @MrMcArdle @Markievicz @lcenglish1 @leenbre @eesxxx @MsFCampbell @JanetteCondon @HeleneOKeefe

And more English teacher blogs:

www.cbcenglishdep.blogspot.com

www.stmarysenglish13.blogspot.ie

www.stmichaelsenglishdept.tumblr.com

 http://ienglish.ie/

http://pclm.weebly.com

http://www.loughallencollegeliteracyhut.com/

Guest post: The art of photography

When Evelyn asked me write a guest blog for her now famous website, I was both flattered and slightly nervous. It’s been many years since I’ve written an essay for an English teacher! So long in fact that the last time I did this, I was literally putting pen to paper. Now, I can’t even imagine writing an essay without spell check, the delete button and ‘cut and paste’ to edit as I go.

I only slightly digress here, as the delete button applies to taking photos too. To be in a position to review a photo immediately and have the opportunity to change your settings and have a second go at the shot within 10 seconds of the first, makes all the difference.  After all, practice makes perfect. But at 30c a click, the film era was an expensive learning curve for many.

So is that the key to taking a good photograph? Click until you get it right?

By way of background, I’m not a full-time, “professional” photographer. What started as a passion has thankfully led to some wonderful shooting opportunities, but for the most part, I sit in an office practicing law.  For this reason, I’m often reluctant to even describe myself as a photographer (!) which, upon reflection is ridiculous.  Everyone who knows me knows I’m happiest with a camera in my hand and that there’s nothing I love more than capturing a moment in time, a memory or an image that brings a smile to someone’s face.  So yes, I am a photographer. I don’t have a diploma or a degree in media studies, design or art however and truthfully, this is the first time I’ve ever thought in depth about what the qualities of a great photo are. The first answer that comes to mind for me therefore is simple – it’s about how it makes you feel.

Yes, when you get deep into it, there are an enormity of technical considerations, aperture and shutter speed settings and rules on ‘the perfect photo’ out there. There are libraries of books and millions of blogs and youtube videos on a multitude of photography issues. And should you so choose, you can spend hundreds or even thousands of euros on the best gear and courses. All of these things will certainly help perfect your art, but like all art, what makes a good photo is subjective.

So as a photographer, the most important lesson I can offer is this – if you love a photo; if it means something to you; if it reaches you in a way that makes your mind race, your heart pound or makes you laugh out loud; if it stirs a memory or a feeling inside of you or if it you simply like the look of it, it’s a good photo. Sure, it may have faults. It may disobey all the rules and get no ‘likes’ on Facebook.  And worse, it may not sell, not a small problem if your livelihood depends on it. But I do not believe any of that matters.

The photo should be sharp, with the subject in focus. It should have vibrant colours or strong black and white monochromatic tones. It should be framed well and most importantly, it should tell a story. If it doesn’t evoke some emotion at a glance, it has probably failed as a news photo. War images evoke anger and chaos.  Sports images evoke action and reaction. Festival images evoke fun and excitement.

Even something relatively bland like a portrait of a politician at a press conference should complement the news story. Is their face buried in their hands? Do they look angry or content? Are they desperately trying to make a convincing argument with a defeated look in their eyes? It’s actually incredible how a photo can speak volumes in seconds. Have you ever looked at a single image of a musician, live in concert and thought, that looks like an incredible gig? If so, what made you think that? You weren’t there. You didn’t hear a single note and you probably can’t even tell if the venue was half full? For me, it’s a number of things: the dramatic lighting or smoke-filled stage, the beads of sweat running down his forehead or the veins in his neck as he pours his heart and soul into every note that comes out of his mouth. How on earth could it have been a bad gig? Does it matter if it was? No. The photo is an art form in itself and can be judged independently. But if it helps sell tickets, excellent. That said, sometimes the photo won’t be as sharp as you’d like (the dark, crazy lighting conditions of a gig are far from ideal) but if it makes you feel like you’re there, on stage, in the moment, then who cares. It’s a great photo. It all comes back to how it makes you feel.

But let’s step back from what the media are looking for in a photo. You’ve been to a gig or a show. You’ve ignored the conditions on your ticket and you’ve brought your camera. You take dozens of shots and they’re all blurry. And then at the end of one song, the stage lights up, the crowd go wild and click! There it is! You can vaguely make out a figure on the stage, the atmosphere looks incredible and you’re over the moon! Straight to facebook! Mission accomplished.

So does this mean you shouldn’t learn more about your art or try to improve? Of course not. In any case, if you’re passionate enough about photography, this won’t even be a choice. For me, it’s an addiction. And the great thing is, if you enjoy it, like any passion, you won’t even realise you’re learning. You’ll look through your photos and ask yourself, why did this image work while this one didn’t? After all, the camera settings were the same. I clicked the same button. It must be the surroundings then? The more questions you ask, and the more attention you pay to your environment when shooting, and especially to the light, the more decent photos you’ll be posting on Facebook. Because you cannot but learn when you ask questions of yourself and your work and when you practice.

I travelled the world independently for 2 years back in 2006. For the most part, I travelled alone but armed with my 3 megapixel compact camera, I seldom felt lonely. And honestly, I thought the thousand of photos I took were amazing. And they were. They are. Why? Because I still look through them all the time, remembering a place, a time, a face, a feeling of elation, exhaustion or sadness. And I know as the years go on and my memories fade, my journal and my photos will always take me back. So how on earth could I not describe them as good photos?

But as the years go by and I learn more about my hobby, I would be lying if I said I don’t review them with a critical eye. In fact, there are very few in the collection that I wouldn’t shoot differently now and for the most part, none of these older travel shots are on my website because they didn’t make the cut. Back then I knew little or nothing about exposure, light, when to use the flash or tripod. I also had limited functionality with my little compact camera compared to the pro DSLR I have now. I suppose I’ve always had a natural eye for framing a photo which is definitely key. There are some classic images you see over and over again, taken from the same angle because that angle works. (Google “Taj Mahal” for images and you’ll see what I mean). If it ain’t broke, right? Sure, but try something new too. Be creative and think outside the box. What if I get down on my hunkers? What if I frame the subject through a window or door frame? What if I come back at sunset? Or what if I zoom in a little more. I’ve been to over 40 countries and I have hundreds and often thousands of photos from each of them, but there’s nowhere I don’t want to revisit and re-shoot. That’s the passion talking. So keep an open mind and don’t afraid to review your work with a critical eye from time to time.

Of course, there are some photos you will never improve on, because they captured a moment that would otherwise be forever lost. The joy of a marriage proposal. The shock when everyone shouts “surprise!” The anticipation 10 seconds before the final whistle of a big game. The determination of an athlete moments before they cross the finish line. The hopelessness of an Iraqi man standing over the ruins of his shelled home. Or perhaps something as simple as capturing a smile and seeing happiness in a loved one’s eye.

Which brings me nicely onto timing. The beauty of photography, especially shooting a location or an event, is that two photographers will rarely see the same moment or scene in the same way. And even a day late, a scene will most certainly look different, even to the same photographer. An obvious example is the comparison of a photo of Croke Park on an All-Ireland final day versus a photo, taken from the same spot, at the same time the following day. A less obvious example would be a series of shots taken of the same landscape within a 10 minute window. The sun might pop out behind the clouds. A reflection might be cast in the water. Angry rain clouds might gather. A silhouette might appear on the horizon or a horse might step into the foreground. Look again at those google images of the Taj Mahal. In many ways the same photo but each so different. Here’s one of my own favourites from a recent music festival I was shooting. I think you’ll agree this sets a very different scene to the clichéd mud-filled camping experiences we usually see in Ireland. But one minute after this shot was taken, the sun was gone, night fell and the glow of the moment was gone.

Sometimes, it’s matter of luck. Right place, right time, camera phone in your pocket and click! Brilliant. You can make your own luck too, though patience will often be required. Again, this is where the passion comes in. This ‘sixth olympic ring’ photo took Reuters photographer Luke McGregor a painstaking 3 days to get right, even with his moonrise and moonset homework completed well in advance. I’ve stood at a location for hours on end more than once: clicking and waiting, moving position and clicking again, changing a setting, more waiting… Most of my favourite landscape shots involved planning my day to capture the right light and then hours of commitment to getting it just right. For most, that sounds like punishment! Especially on a cold winter’s evening in the Dublin docklands. But each to their own. If someone told me I had to play rugby for 3 hours in the rain, I’d probably cry! I guess there’s no accounting for how people get their kicks in life!

So any other tips? For one thing ‘cheese!’ is overrated! My favourite shots from my wedding day were taken by our brilliant photographer Melissa Mannion, when neither my husband nor I knew the photographer was even clicking. A look shared during the ceremony; a close up of our hands entwined are my favourites: that moment during a ‘formal posed shot’ when my veil got caught in a gust of wind, blew vertically into the air and we broke down in laughter. Priceless.

In framing your shots, try to stick to the rule of thirds (worth a google). But for now, know that cropping someone at a joint, such as a knee, the waist or neck makes for a very odd looking photo, as does placing your subject smack in the middle of the shot.  If your subject is looking to the left, place them on the right of the photo to help create the feeling that we’re looking into the distance with them. Don’t be afraid to zoom in or crop the photo on your computer to draw the eye to the essence of the shot. Or when you’re standing at a historical building about to click, have a closer look. Is there a gargoyle staring at you with its beady eye that deserves your attention? Is there a spiral staircase that creates an interesting pattern when viewed from above? How about waiting for a bee to land on that flower?

All of that takes practice and if the hobby becomes an obsession (guilty as charged!) you may wish to upgrade to a camera with manual settings so that you can take back control. With most compact cameras, the camera makes the decisions. It’s dark, the camera pops the flash. The flower is the closest subject, that’s where it will focus. The more photos you take, the more you’ll realise that you could do a lot better in the driving seat. Like setting a wide aperture to create depth of field. Changing the subject of the photo changes the photo entirely.

Understand when to use your flash and when to turn it off. The flash will only light a subject within a few metres or so (more for the pro flashes). So using it when you’re deep in the crowd at a concert will only light up the heads in front of you and leave the stage (your subject) dark. Of course, without the flash in low-light conditions, the photos will inevitably be blurred. The camera knows it’s dark so it forces the shutter to stay open a little longer to let more light in. But your hand can only hold the camera sufficiently steady at about 1/30 of a second. Increasing the ISO helps, but this will add noise or grain. That’s where the SLR camera’s come in. But if you don’t have an SLR, wait until the stage lights up and you’ve a better chance of capturing a clean shot. Generally setting the flash off can kill the atmosphere. The soft warm light of a room is replaced with the white light of the flash, but sometimes you have no choice, like when you’re shooting people or moving objects in low light conditions. But the flash can be your friend too. Where there is plenty of light in the background, don’t be afraid to light up your subject in the foreground with the flash. ‘Fill flash’ can really bring your subject out without losing the atmosphere or background.

Don’t be afraid to experiment with a tripod. Ever tried to capture a cityscape at night from a distance? But when you try to shoot, the flash pops and you’re left with black skyline and some random rubbish bin in the foreground that you didn’t even know was there ends up being lit up in all its glory! That wasn’t the plan! Change the camera setting to night mode which will keep the shutter open longer to let the light in; stick the camera on a tripod to avoid camera shake and blur and voila!  I’m reminded of the value of long exposures every time I stare at my one of my Hong Kong skyline shots. Sure the buildings are sharp but it’s essentially just a black photo with some coloured lights. At the time of course, I thought I was the bees knees! And I guess it was the best I could do at the time with the equipment and knowledge I had. For example, I know now that leaving the shutter open on a camera for longer periods of time can really add wow factor, as this photo demonstrates. To the naked eye, the sky here was pretty black, but allowing the city lights to flood the sky with an orange glow over 30 seconds, really made this shot. Sometimes it works, more times the weather gets in the way. But don’t be afraid to experiment and try something new. It costs nothing to click and delete.

I could go on and on here. Try shooting close-ups using the macro setting. Put some distance between your subject and the background to create a narrow depth of field. Follow a moving object like a bicycle on a long shuttter speed to achieve a panning effect. Play around with your photos after you’ve taken them using free software such as Picasa. There’s an ocean of knowledge out there!  And if like me, you find that you’re the one in your group of mates who always has the camera at the parties or events, don’t be afraid to dive in!

Before I sign off, one final (non-photography-related) thought. If when the leaving cert is over, your academic pursuits have taken you on a less creative journey than the experience you had in your leaving cert English class (or on this website!), take a moment to bring yourself back to this place in your life. Sure, right now essays are just ‘homework’ but I promise you, life gets VERY busy all of a sudden.  You’ll have a day job, maybe a family of your own and perhaps even an after-hours passion which involves many hours of shooting and even more hours editing. And as you sit at your desk, sifting through thousands of photos, updating your website and backing-up your hard drive, you’ll find little or no time to stop and ask yourself a simple question like “what makes a good photograph?”. And even less time to write a comprehensive answer to that question.

For giving me the little nudge I needed to put finger to keyboard and re-live my photography journey, Evelyn, thank you.

Sincere thanks to the very talented Michelle Geraghty for agreeing to write this guest post for leavingcertenglish.net. You can visit her website or give her a like on facebook here: http://www.facebook.com/MichelleGeraghtyPhotography

What’s wrong with the Leaving Cert?

Unless you’ve been hibernating under a rock you’ll be aware that the Leaving Cert results came out this week. As usual, the media focused almost exclusively on the two or three geniuses who managed to achieve near superhuman results, in some cases 9 A1s! These individuals are undoubtedly exceptional on so many levels and celebrating exceptional human beings in every field of human endeavour is a truly wonderful thing. I for one would hate to live in a world where individual achievement was ignored instead of exhalted.

However…

What about the exceptional individuals whose talents aren’t recognised or rewarded by the Leaving Cert? Are they to conclude that the things they are good at simply don’t matter or have no value in an educational context? Talents like leadership, teamwork, creativity and innovation – are these things  really irrelevant when assessing their time at school and awarding college places?

I’ve been thinking about the Leaving Cert a lot over the last few months. What kicked it all off was an #edchatie discussion back in April on the possibility of achieving “A Better, Fairer Leaving Cert”. A few short weeks later I was delighted to hear the articulate and intelligent Fionnghuala King lambast the Leaving Cert at our school’s Graduation Mass  (you can read excerpts of what she had to say here in the Mayo News). Then the day of the results thejournal.ie rang me for reaction to the results and to the exams system itself and 24hours later I was in the middle of a heated row with George Hook on Newstalk about the relative merits of the current system. Only four short days after the results and after a summer of exhausting media interviews The Irish Times finally acknowledged that I might have something of value to say and yet I find myself still grasping for a coherent alternative method of assessing students achievements at the end of five or sometimes six years of secondary education.

For what it’s worth here are my thoughts. I’m aware they are often contradictory but this is a complex issue!So let’s embrace the paradoxes and tease them out…

  • Embracing change for the sake of change is a pointless and potentially damaging exercise.
  • Nonetheless we MUST find a way to reduce the pressure on students without compromising the integrity of the current system which is viewed by most as relatively transparent.
  • Transparency and objectivity are vital in a small country like Ireland which has always struggled with nepotism and corruption (exams which are externally marked & anonymous thankfully negate these negative societal traits).
  • There is no simple or obvious utopian alternative but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t keep looking for a lesser evil.
  • We need a terminal exam which assesses academic ability & aptitudes??? (I’m not sure about this one…)
  • Should a terminal exam be combined with some continuous assessment? Can we prevent plagiarism and maintain trasparency if we go down this route? Is there a danger of more grade inflation? Will parents/neighbours/teaching colleagues put pressure on teachers to give their son/daughter a higher grade than they deserve? Does this mean that those who shout the loudest will get the most? and how would this play out for students whose parents play fair? or don’t care? Aren’t teachers supposed to be advocates for their students not judge and jury? Will students just beg borrow or steal projects that they know will get them a good grade? And if this happens what are we willing to do about it? (Not very much, if this case is anything to go by).
  • The Leaving Cert as it exists is an incredibly blunt instrument which assesses a very narrow range of aptitudes and abilities and all too often leads to rote learning and regurgitation. However, is a certain amount of knowledge (stored in your memory rather than in a computer) a prerequisite for analysis and synthesis and deep understanding? This might be a chicken and egg debate – which comes first? Certainly you cannot rote learn your way to 600 points in your Leaving Cert. But if you repeat and select only the subjects which require and reward rote learning you can certainly get 500 points.
  • Exam technique and the ability to remain calm under pressure are the aptitudes which are rewarded most highly under the current system – if you fall down in either of these areas you fall down in your Leaving Cert. So God help you if you don’t (or can’t) nurture and develop these ‘talents’.
  • It is unforgiveable that there is no repeat procedure for students who are hit by illness or bereavement, through no fault of their own, immediately prior to and/or during exams.
  • It’s good that we offer a rounded education – I don’t think we should follow the British system where you could study English language, English literature, Drama and General Studies and then say you had studied 4 subjects for your A levels – let’s face it this is mostly different branches of the same subject and you’d have received a very narrow education indeed in your final two years of secondary school education.
  • However, we currently offer a very narrow range of subjects, with a ridiculous bias in favour of students who are good at languages – most schools have their subject choices arranged in such a way that you must study three languages. So almost 50% of your leaving cert subjects are languages irrespective of what your interests, aptitudes and abilities are. How fair must that feel if you love Maths, Accounting, Business, Art, Tech Graphics and Woodwork??? I know I certainly resented being told that I ‘had‘ to do a science subject when I wanted to do a combination of History, Geography, Art and Music. I was lucky in many ways – English and French were also on that list whether I liked it or not – but in my case I loved languages.
  • The range of subjects being offered is getting narrower all the time thanks to cutbacks. Physics, Chemistry, Accounting, Economics, History and Applied Maths are now all considered minority subjects. I mean seriously, WTF???
  • The bell curve sets students up for failure. It’s not about your achievements, it’s about how crap your achievements are compared to Mary down the road. Vomit.
  • We need to reform the system of college entry – the points system is so crude and so cruel we should be ashamed of ourselves. Fix this and a lot of the pressure, stress, worry and one-up-man-ship of the current system will dissappear.

That’s all I’ve got for now. Lots to grapple with.