利用头像作业将批判理论融入新闻摄影课堂

Andrea Briscoe, Kyser Lough
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本案例研究在新闻摄影课上使用多样性和批判性思维练习来展示新闻教育者如何将关于道德和判断的种族和性别对话纳入传统的以技能为导向的课程。在一个社会动荡、不平等和媒体信任度下降的时代,新闻系学生学习如何正确运用他们的技能是至关重要的。民主公民和新闻是交织在一起的,但更大的道德对话往往被排除在以技能为导向的课程之外。这可能会导致技能本身与实践技能的责任之间的脱节,尤其是在涉及权力和代表的问题时。新闻摄影领域仍然以白人和男性为主,这使得学生们质疑自己的偏见,以确保对自己社区的道德报道变得更加重要。这项作业要求学生为36个陌生人拍摄肖像,随后的课堂练习让他们面对自己固有的偏见,将他们拍摄的人的人口统计数据与一般人群进行比较。本案例研究的数据包括对课堂对话的观察和学生随后完成的反思性新闻练习。研究结果表明,这种做法是一种成功的方式,将种族和性别考虑引入摄影新闻伦理和判断的一部分。学生们最初在选择拍摄对象时忽略了代表性和多样性,但后来他们说,他们可以有效地将反射性融入到他们的作品中,努力提供更具代表性的图像,并面对自己的偏见。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Using a Headshot Assignment to Incorporate Critical Theory Into Photojournalism Classrooms
This case study uses a diversity and critical thinking exercise in a photojournalism class to show how journalism educators can incorporate race and gender conversations about ethics and judgment into traditionally skills-oriented courses. It is crucial that journalism students learn how to apply their skills properly in an era of social unrest, inequality, and dwindling media trust. Democratic citizenship and journalism are intertwined, but often the bigger ethical conversations are left out of skills-oriented courses. This can lead to a disconnect between the skills themselves and the responsibility of practicing the skills, especially when it comes to matters of power and representation. The field of photojournalism remains predominately White and male, which makes it all the more crucial for students to interrogate their own biases to ensure ethical coverage of their communities. The assignment asks students to make 36 portraits of strangers, and the subsequent classroom exercise has them confront their inherent biases by looking at the demographics of the people they photographed compared to the general population. Data for this case study consist of observations of the classroom conversations and a reflexive journalism exercise the students completed afterward. Findings indicate this exercise is a successful way to introduce racial and gender considerations as part of photojournalistic ethics and judgment. Students initially neglected to think about representation and diversity in their selection of people to photograph but afterward said they could effectively incorporate reflexivity into their work in an effort to provide more representative imagery and confront their own biases.
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