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ZOOM-IN MANUAL & CURRICULUM
Ellenka Wasung-Lott from the local Boys & Girls Club, with studet photographer Abi Baker, editing a photo during Workshop II.
This two-pronged project, called Zoom-In, aimed not only to guide coalition partners but to raise community awareness of the issues young people faced in their community. PhotoVoice
Caption: "Dari Joy is a place we can be with family and friends to go eat food and ice cream. When Spring comes all of the people get excited because that is when Dari Joy opens."
Gathering a Team To begin the process, NEN hired a photography teacher at a local charter school who had both an interest in the project and access to cameras and photo-editing equipment. NEN then gathered a group of area youth-serving professionals and volunteers to serve as adult sponsors of the project. Each adult represented a geographic area of the county, and was asked to select 3-5 young people for participation in the project. Specifically, they were asked to invite youth they personally knew; who seemed fairly representative of other youth people in the community; who felt motivated to communicate with others about our overall question; and who could attend two workshops and care for expensive equipment. Each adult sponsor would be loaned a camera and expected to coordinate the use of the camera for each of the participants he or she sponsored, as well as offer support for problems or questions that might arise. The Workshops The group would attend an initial training workshop, break for two weeks to take the photos, then meet again for a photo selection and editing session. Workshop I was two hours long, though it probably should have been at least an hour longer. With the help of an adult facilitator, the group focused on four goals: understanding the goals of the project; brainstorming the kind of messages that each person and regional team might want to communicate; learning how to use the equipment; and honing the art of visually capturing ideas through photographs. Workshop II took four hours, and in it we selected, edited, and wrote captions for the photos that would appear in the final exhibit. Each participant sorted through the 10-20 pictures he or she had brought to the workshop, and selected the 3-5 that best told their story. We left the second workshop with about 500 pictures total to be used for various projects, 30 captioned photos which could be printed for gallery use or other displays and 4 display boards with the captioned photos that represented each region. Taking the Photos We sent the teams out with a set of basic ground rules and instructions. Each team had one camera that was rotated among its members. The adult team leaders were given their own list of tips. They provided general supervision, made sure each young person got at least two days with the camera, and tried to ensure (with only partial success) that each team member made it back to the all-important editing workshop. Some youth went out alone with their cameras; others went in groups. PhotoVoice projects in urban areas would want to think carefully about youth safety issues.
Steve Holmes of the local Compass School teaches the PhotoVoice team.
We used the photos in several ways. They illustrated 'Lots More Positive Attitude,' the final report of the survey findings; a select group of photos became a travelling exhibit at galleries and other public spaces in the county; that core group of photos and a few extras were posted in a slideshow on the Youth ImPact website; and a multimedia presentation featuring the photos and the survey findings was delivered to groups around the county. Grouops included the regional planning board, a local homeless shelter, and a local prevention coalition. These audiences have not only been thoughtful in how to use this data to guide their work, but have given our coalition some great suggestions on what projects are needed. Lessons Learned One of our best decisions was recruiting adult sponsors. They not only were essential in recruiting appropriate youth (youth who might have something to say, who could be trusted with an expensive camera and who could devote two full days to the project). The photography teacher we hired to lead the two workshops was experienced in both the technical aspects of photography but also in helping young people look for scenes that represented their thoughts and ideas. Some mistakes we made included timing. We were determined to conduct the project during the school year so that if they wished, students could take photos of school life. Because of various scheduling difficulties, however, the project was pushed to the very end of the calendar year, right before graduation, which led to time crunches for the young people that we hadn't anticipated. workshops. Finding a less demanding time of year for our participants would have been helpful.
Danielle Southwell from Youth Services Inc. and Crystal Thomson, a youth photographer, edit during Workshop II.
In order to insure that as many pictures as possible are thoughtfully considered and to help students create captions during the second workshop, we wish we would have required photographers to write a brief journal entry for each picture with rationale about how it got chosen and a description of how it shows a supportive or unsupportive part of the photographer's life.
Youth photographer Cooper Feiner-Homer editing a photo.
Workshop Exercises The most important aspect of this project is helping participants understand that photos and captions can be a powerful way to convey messages. The purpose of this project is to reveal things in the community that help young people, and things that upset or disappoint them. (Examples of things that support them might be sports, clubs, music, friends, hang-outs spots, certain teachers and other adults, or religious places; things that might upset them might be drugs, liquor stores, or urban blight. These are only examples. Youth will decide for themselves which resources and people they consider helpful, and which they don't.) The photos will be shared with people who can work with young people to improve conditions. Activity 1: Who is in the room? Participants are asked to stand and identify themselves with various identities: age, area, gender, economic situation, type of neighborhood, family connections, community involvement, etc. The facilitator processes by asking about similarities and differences among us.
A section of the graffiti wall that youth created to brainstorm ideas during Workshop I.
![]() Caption: "This used to be a restaurant where people danced and ate with family. It has been like this for over a year."
Activity 3: How to communicate through photos. Each team lists the name of 10 things in their community people, places, businesses, cultural activities, schools, service providers, etc., that elaborate on the words and drawings on their graffiti wall. For example, one of the teams in our group said the physical condition of downtown was depressing. After thinking about it, he decided he could illustrate this by taking a photo of a particular building that had been gutted by fire more than a year ago, but was still standing unrepaired. Activity 4: Learn from other photovoice projects. Look at sample pictures of other photovoice efforts (pictures with captions) in the packet. Ask students to describe what the picture with its caption are communicating. Have them answer the question, "What power do these photos have to make change?"
The photo appeared in the final presentation of PhotoVoice. The caption appearing under it read, "Many of the youth are faced with this image daily. We need to change that!"
Activity 6: Learning to use the camera. Go over the parts and processes of the cameras and ask students to go and take several pictures of each other to experiment. Have them return and ask questions. With written, detailed instructions, students will transfer their images from the memory card to the computer, add their names to the photographs, perform any necessary adjustments, and print them. Activity 7: Taking the photos and writing the captions. The group breaks for two weeks. During that time, each team takes its photos, with an adult team leader making sure each participant has at least a couple of days with the camera. Students will document in a journal all the pictures that they took and write a couple sentences describing their rationale for taking that picture and what it might say about what it describes. Activity 8: With input from adult co-leaders, students choose pictures print and display. They will then write captions for those photos that explain why the took it and what they want to communicate through it. Activity 9: Photos are mounted and displayed. The exhibit can displayed for week-long periods in schools, art galleries, churches and other public spaces. Presentations can be given to select groups planning boards, boards of directors of youth organizations, school personnel using a projector. We want to thank the adult sponsors and the photographers in the Windham Youth PhotoVoice project: West River Valley: Lori Greenberg from Leyland and Gray Union High School and Cooper Feiner-Homer; Brattleboro: Ricky Davidson from the Boys and Girls Club of Brattleboro and Autumn Kendell, Zach Gilbeau, and Ann-Marie Bliss; Bellows Falls: Ellenka Wasung-Lott from the Boys and Girls Club and Danielle Southwell from Youth Services Inc., and Crystal Thomson, Jacqueline Cantor and Abi Baker; and Wilmington: Shelly Park, Sarah Dumaine, Michael Squiers, and Tony Roy. Not all members are pictured here. |
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