I am on an image kick lately, but here is what happened in my class today. It was powerful:
The grade sevens have been doing some research about Afghanistan for our upcoming book, Boy Overboard. We spoke in class today about the power of imagery to tell a story. We spoke about how giving a Pecha Kucha is not about delivering information, like a traditional report about food, currency, and population, but rather we want to strike a chord, make the viewers feel something. It is about emotions and forcing the viewer to think.
Here is an example. One student insisted on showing a flag. He wanted to use this:
We talked about whether or not this image was alive. Or whether it inspired emotions, told a story. The answer was a resounding no!
We searched on Flickr for some CC images and found these:
cc licensed ( BY NC ) flickr photo shared by United States Marine Corps Official Page
cc licensed ( BY NC ) flickr photo shared by Abhishek’s Photo Essays
One student still wanted to just add the words Afghanistan Flag as the text. We agreed that we could only have three words. I told him to do some research and find out what the colors in the flag mean. We found out that the black is for occupation by foreigners, the red for the blood of the freedom fighters, and the green for Islam. The student decided to simply add the words Occupation, Blood, Islam.
We talked a bit about design, colors, and composition and came up with this:
I think this tells a much more interesting story than this:
Now we will work on what we will say for twenty seconds over the slide!
This is indeed a powerful message and I love the simple way that you presented this activity. Where do you get your ideas?
Thank you Marion. Not sure where the ideas come from. I thought of this one on the spot in class when I saw that kids were reverting to informational presentations. I am tried of seeing regurgitated information pass as story telling. I want them to feel emotion in the data they are sharing. Afghanistan is more than a fact sheet. I want to use the web and the images there to help build a fuller picture of what it looks like. Ultimately I want them to see the common humanity in imagery.
Will share the final products next week. I am loving this model of pPecha Kucha research to start a unit of inquiry. I am using in all three grades I teacher. The grade tens start a search on Soleldad to get ready for Of Mice and Men, next week.
Nice little model. Feel free to use and tweek and share back.
I love this idea, Jabiz. Thanks for posting your creativity!