2016 Photo III
2016 Photo III
2016 Photo III
Borleis
2016-2017
Course description
In this course, students will develop a thematic body of work that can be used for college admissions,
scholarships, and student exhibitions. As students move from the second to the third level in photo studio, the
content sharpens in focus upon self-assessment and evaluation. Students continue working in a sketchbook/
journal to refine personal imagery based on the study of master artists.
The structure of Photo III is very different from past art classes. The primary direction of your work, including
your time in class and at home, is determined by you. Your interests, influences, inspiration, and questions will
guide the work you make. You will work more in groups in class and will be involved in group shooting work
outside of class. You will be given guided assignments throughout the year either individually or as a class as
the artistic maturity, interests, and needs are assessed by the instructor.
Each assignment will require a rubric stating a student generated objective, a researched artist with
images and description of their work posted online, a contact sheet analysis turned in, and final edited
photos turned in online or in print form. All Photo III students will complete 7 independent shooting
assignments towards their AP Concentration throughout the year ON TOP of the 7 shooting
assignments all Photo III students will complete.
If you fail to meet deadlines, a meeting will be scheduled between the instructor, you, and your parent, in order
to assess your progress and continue your growth. Deadlines are critical to your success in this class.
Students choose what and how they wish to work. Students need to work on many diverse problems to
encourage and ensure portfolio individuality. In the Breadth section, students explore a variety of concepts and
approaches in order to demonstrate their abilities and versatility with problem solving, ideas, and techniques.
These experiences are also used to develop an approach for their concentration.
Students are encouraged to develop verbal and written literacy about their works and we use the AP scoring
rubric for individual and group evaluation. Students are encouraged to examine their work and discuss how to
move it from a middle range piece to a high-level piece of artwork.
Course objectives
The course includes the three following components:
1. Study of master artists and contemporary artists and trends. In addition to class work, students are
expected to view work online, visit galleries and local museums in Baltimore and Washington on their
own.
2. A sketchbook/journal/binder to be composed of visual ideas, notes, photos, plans, short assignments,
quick drawings, and practice of various techniques. Colleges like to see a students sketchbook to see
how ideas are generated.
3. Development of the students portfolio for AP 2-D Design has three parts and will be maintained in print
form and digitally online and stored on the school hard drive (with a backup at home).
Materials
All basic photo materials for this class will be provided by the instructor. However, photographic
materials that are lost or misused must be replaced at cost by the student. Provided materials will include:
photo paper, 35mm B&W film, and camera.
Traditionally, the following materials have been required for this class for the organization of negatives, prints,
and notes. If students are unable to purchase these materials on their own, they may need to make or borrow
used ones in class:
_____ 9x12 spiral or hardbound sketchbook/notebook (students may use an older sketchbook from a
previous class) Please no tape bound sketchbooks as they fall apart in a matter of weeks!
_____ OR 3-ring binder with sections (protects and stores all negatives and prints which are easily
damaged)
_____ OPTIONAL thumb-drive or disk on key (for saving Photoshop Assignments in-progress)
Cameras
Due to the number of students we have enrolled this year, we have a very limited supply of cameras. However
a student is not required to purchase a camera for this class. Cameras (SLR, DSLR, and Point & Shoots) are
available to sign out for a period of two days. If you are interested in purchasing your own camera this year, I
am more than happy to help you on your research. ;)
be graded on only your own performance and progress on your individual effort, growth, and
improvement- NOT how your finished work compares to the rest of the class. At the completion of each
unit, you will asses your own progress through written refection before submitting the work for a grade.
Students will be assessed by participating in small-group and class critiques, as well as completing a selfassessment based on the criteria clearly stated when the assignment is given out. The criteria is based upon
the following categories:
IDEA DEVELOPMENT - Critical thinking and brainstorming of the concepts and problems (essential
questions) posed in the unit.
DESIGN - The use of the Principles of Design to create an elegant visual answer to the essential questions
post in the unit.
PERSONAL CHOICES - The unique exploration of the essential question specifically encouraging the use of
the students personal experiences and perspectives.
CRAFTSMANSHIP - Addresses the neatness of presentation and physical care of work.
STUDIO SKILLS - Handling/use of materials and equipment in a way that helps effectively communicate the
students solution to problems posed in the unit.
The grading scale is as follows:
A = 90 - 100
B = 80 - 89
C = 70 - 79
D = 60 - 69
E = 0 - 59
NOTE THAT INCOMPLETE WORK WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED; ONLY FINISHED WORK WILL RECEIVE A
GRADE.
Classwork/Studio Time
Homework
Classwork vs homework
As this is an Honors/Advanced Placement source, a minimum of three to four hours of outside work is
expected each week. Most often, for each marking period there will be three assignments, each taking nine or
more hours to complete. As long-term homework assignment allows for the greatest individual interpretation
and creative problem solving, the expectation is substantial.
Significantly, these are also the works that colleges tend to be MOST interested in because the problems have
the greatest latitude for personal interpretation. Therefor these works are primarily responsible for getting you
into the college level art program of your choice. The homework given more weight than individual classwork
assignments. Therefor any student not submitting homework- or submitting hastily prepared homework - will be
unlikely to pass that marking period. Any student enrolled in AP will have work in addition to this.
Out of class work will consist of 60% of the grade for the cause while 40% will be in class work/studio time.
This at home time will be used for journal assignments, some preparation and brainstorming, reviewing
information, and for completing major assignments. Most assignments will require students to complete out-ofclass work. It is in the students best interest to use their regular class time wisely to complete assignments. If
in-class time is not used wisely, more out-of-class work may be the result. It is the students responsibility to
check the class website/blog regularly for assignments so that they meet all posted deadlines.
Homework will not be accepted late (unless you have an excused absence).
Denial of Credit
According to county-wide policy, students are not to miss more than 5% of any credited classes for the entire
school year. Missing a studio class can put a student in a difficult position for making up work. All students
should be responsible for making up missed assignments of their own accord. Since this course is only offered
during 4th period, that means you can only miss 5 days before you are in danger of not receiving credit.
Reminder that if you are late to class 3 times that counts as 1 absence.
Behavior Policy
Code of Conduct - All students are expected to abide by the Long Reach Honor Code at all times and will be
held accountable for any violations of the Honor Code. Failure to do so will result in an intervention or referral
depending on the frequency or severity of the offense.
Sequence for Minor Incidents:
1st Offense: Verbal Warning
2nd Offense: Contact home and teacher consequence.
3rd Offense: Contact home and discipline referral.
Students will be asked to initial a form after each offense to note that each step in the sequence has been
taken and to give students knowledge of what is happening.
Incidents not considered minor will result in an automatic contact home and discipline referral.
Late Policy
Due to past years, a new late policy has been put in place. Students will be asked to fill out a form after each
tardy. The sequence is as follows:
1st Offense: Teacher/Student Conference
2nd Offense: Teacher/Student Conference and Parent Contact
3rd Offense: Teacher Detention & Parent Contact
4th Offense: Teacher Detention & Parent Contact
5th Offense: Administrative Referral & Parent Contact
Cut Policy - If a student cuts class, he/she will be referred to administration on the first offense and receive a
phone call home and discipline referral as well.
Electronics Policy
While we are a BYOD (bring your own device) school, all cell phones are expected to be off and away
during class hours unless otherwise instructed. In this course, you may very well be asked to use your
cameras, interact through applications such as Instagram, or find photographs for reference. During these
specific times you may use your phone. However playing on your phone, texting, and other activities are
strictly prohibited and will result in either contact home or possible removal from class. This goes for all other
electronic devices too. (Sorry, no listening to music in class!)
BREADTH:
Examples of 2-D Breadth problems;
Media could include graphic design, typography, digital imaging, photography, fabric design, weaving,
illustration, painting, or printmaking.
Work that employs line, shape, or color to create unity or variety in a composition.
Work that demonstrates symmetry/asymmetry, balance, or anomaly.
Work that explore figure/ground relationships.
Development of modular or repeat pattern to create rhythm.
Color organization using primary, secondary, tertiary, analogous, or other color combinations for
emphasis or contrast in compositions.
Work that investigates or exaggerates proportion/scale.
CONCENTRATION:
Examples of 2-D Concentration problems;
Design and execute a childrens book.
A series of identity products for an imaginary business.
Political cartoons using current events and images.
Series of works starting with representational interpretations and evolving into abstraction.
Exploration of pattern and design found in nature and/or culture.
Abstractions developed from cells and other microscopic images.
A personal family history communicated through symbols and imagery.
A series of fabric designs, apparel designs, or weavings on a theme.
Use of multiple modules to create compositions that reflect narrative or psychological events.
Series of landscapes that uses color and composition to intensify artistic expression.
QUALITY:
(Five Actual Works) Asses your selected portfolio work and score it on the following criteria:
Poor
Moderate
Good
Strong
Excellent
Inventive/Imaginative
Purposeful composition
Sensitive/Evocative
If you have not scored your work consistently in the 4 or 5 range, now assess what the strengths and
weaknesses are, and how to rework the piece so it will score a 5. Use the questions below to help you explain
your rationale:
Have you done anything special with the use of the art elements (line, color, shape, texture, value)?
1.
What are some of the dominant shapes, expressive forms, color scheme, and textures that carry
2.
significance in this artwork?
Is the work ordered/balanced? Or chaotic/disturbing? What makes for the order of chaos? Would
3.
you use words such as unity, variety, contrast, balance, movement, and rhythm to describe formal
characteristics of this work?
Describe the quality of execution and technique. What gives the work its uniqueness?
4.
Does the work evoke any feeling? To what do you ascribe your feelings- the use of color, shape,
5.
technique, theme?
Is there symbolism used in the work to convey meaning other than what you want the viewer to
6.
think about? Did you successfully get your message across?
What is your general impression of the work? What did you want the viewer to think about? Did you
7.
successfully get your message across?
Discuss if the work is a significant success, why or why not, and support your judgment with evidence.
student signature
I have reviewed the expectations for this course with the student in my care.
parent/guardian signature
Publication Notice
Some of the work we will be undertaking this year will be used for building/updating a school-based
visual arts website. For this purpose, I, the teacher will photograph some of your artwork, students
working in class, and taking some quotes from reflective statements. Students will also their
documented work for a digital portfolio.
Please ask your parents/guardians to sign below giving permission for your artwork to be reproduced for/in the
school based website and art education publications. (I can publish and post only student work for which
parent/guardian permission has been granted.) Permission is not required and will in no way affect the
assessment and grading of student work throughout the year.
I grant permission for the Long Reach Fine Arts Department to document my child, their artwork, and reflective
statements for publication in school-based websites and art education journals.
x
parent/guardian signature
date