Types of Images that Can Be Used to Tell a Story • Images that you take yourself • Images that you find from archival sources (you must receive written permission to use these), such as: o Family photos o Newspaper and other reference sources o Photos from interview subjects or story subjects o Non-copyright photos from the Internet or taken from video screen shots • Other visuals: Maps, drawings, representative documents, scanned images, objects that relate to the story (you must receive written permission to use these). You can obtain these from the interview subject or you can recreate them. Types of Audio that Can Be Used to Tell a Story • Audio from your interviews (you must receive written permission from the interview subject) • Ambient sounds that represent your interview subject, plot or a physical setting that relates to your story • Narration from you (student producers) • Interviews of the student producers sharing your ideas about the story you are telling • Audio taken from archival sources (you must receive written permission to use these), such as: o TV or radio news o Songs (you can record them from a local musician or create them yourself) o Non-copyrighted interviews, music, or ambient audio found on the Internet or from other sources o Archival recordings • Recording of written materials read by student producers or interview subjects (with appropriate permissions). Written materials can be already produced items that are published by other authors or materials written by students in response to their subject, for example: short stories, poems, news articles, speeches, recipes, etc. • Recreated ambient sounds or scripted dialogues of past events that you make and record More on the electronic portfolio process can be found on the Helen Barrett, PHD workshop "Using e-portfolios" |