Sunday, May 31, 2015

Disruption: The Role of Image in Communication


Alphabetic print-based test is losing prominence in the ways we communicate in the New Media Age.  





Photos, once slices of a moment in the past — sunsets, meetings with friends, the family vacation — are fast becoming an entirely new type of dialogue. 


This is precisely how author Nick Bilton describes photography as a communication medium in his blog from the New York Times. Gone are the days in which photos merely served as a way to capture a fleeting memory. 

Today, we are quickly discovering the potential for photos to replace a portion of print-based communication. Interestingly enough, corporate moguls like Facebook and Twitter have been the first to catch on by purchasing photo-based and video-based social media platforms. By doing so, they keep up with the ever-increasing research which proves that consumers are increasingly replacing text with media messages. 

In my opinion, I feel like this communication practice evolved because we see ourselves in an increasingly text-laden world. Social media has only (albeit beneficially) perpetuated that theory. 

However, when I look to the future I wonder if technology such as Google Glass will quickly become the norm? We've all seen the recent sic-fi films and continually find ourselves wondering what the next step in technological evolution will be, and most importantly how it will change us as human beings.


After the photo is viewed, it disappears forever, like a casual exchange on the street.


This aforementioned quote was particularly thought-provoking. Photography, as referenced in the article, is increasingly becoming a choice for a communication medium. And thus, photos are quickly being discarded after they are viewed. 

What does this mean for photography as an art? How will we distinguish works of art from simple communication? Will the lines between communication and art be blurred, or will photography as an art become cheapened?


Week #1

Hello all! My name is Marlisa Lake and I currently live in Fairmont, WV. I'll be finishing up the final two courses of my Master's degree(which is an Ed.M with a concentration in Digital Media, New Literacies, & Learning), and I'll be on my way to being a classroom teacher for a few years.

I'm really looking forward to this class because of the great readings as well as my peers' collective writings. The collaborative atmosphere of the blogging learning environment is one of the most beneficial ideas that I've picked up-I undoubtedly plan to use this platform in my own teaching.




The clip that I chose to represent what I view literacy as in the 21st Century is an overview of scientific literacy by Neil deGrasse Tyson. To me the processes of curiosity, exploration, and discovery are ideas that need to be applied in all areas of society. Tyson makes a very good point when he says that by 'not being scientifically literate you are disenfranchising yourself from the democratic process, and you don't even know it.'


I just couldn't resist including this image of the Twitter birds emphasizing our methods of communication and literacy through the social media platform! From an outsider's perspective, our usage of hashtags(#) and @ symbols for communicating with others seems a bit odd.

**Random thought alert--I wonder if the bird mascot for Twitter has anything to do with our method of sending paper messages attached to a bird many centuries ago?