Slides for a workshop for an audience of international journalists visiting DePaul University in Chicago, June 2016. Workshop learning objectives:
1) Understand key concepts in digital storytelling, as applied to news production, and be able to apply to story development on current political news example;
2) Improve photography with a smart phone for using in social media and/or digital news stories, plus in-the-field activity to practice concepts; and
3) Using Snapseed photo editing application to edit photos on a smart phone.
In this #SIDLIT2019 session focused on using the iPhone/iPad version of Snapseed to do common photo editing chores. Snapseed is available for Android users also. Participants were shown how to edit images using built-in Tools (Tune image, Details, Curves, Crop, Rotate, Healing, HDR Scape and more) and Looks (automatic built-in adjustments and filters).
This handout was given as a reference to participants in the #SIDLIT2019 session in Hays, Kansas.
In this #SIDLIT2019 session focused on using the iPhone/iPad version of Snapseed to do common photo editing chores. Snapseed is available for Android users also. Participants were shown how to edit images using built-in Tools (Tune image, Details, Curves, Crop, Rotate, Healing, HDR Scape and more) and Looks (automatic built-in adjustments and filters).
This handout was given as a reference to participants in the #SIDLIT2019 session in Hays, Kansas.
Photoshop: Leading digital image editing application for internet, print, and other new media disciplines
Developed and published by Adobe Systems
Photoshop was created in 1988 by Thomas and John Knoll
Became the de facto industry standard in raster graphics editing
Photoshop: Leading digital image editing application for internet, print, and other new media disciplines
Developed and published by Adobe Systems
Photoshop was created in 1988 by Thomas and John Knoll
Became the de facto industry standard in raster graphics editing
Product Launch Process Ppt Images GallerySlideTeam
Presenting product launch process ppt images gallery. This is a product launch process ppt images gallery. This is a three stage process. The stages in this process are setting up plans, product design strategy, product launch, assess product requirements, in depth research, commercial plan, identify potential, evaluate research, strengthen business value, follow 4ps strategy, customer preferences, teamwork, business expansion, set targets, value creation. https://bit.ly/3gsOWJQ
Presenting this set of slides with name Devops Raci Matrix Ppt Powerpoint Presentation File Format. The topics discussed in these slides are Business, Management, Planning, Strategy, Marketing. This is a completely editable PowerPoint presentation and is available for immediate download. Download now and impress your audience. https://bit.ly/3gpxENV
“You can download this product from SlideTeam.net”
Presenting this set of slides with name - Kano Model Process. This is a four stage process.The stages in this process are Kano Model, Kano Framework, Product Development. https://bit.ly/3IJC7r7
PowerPoint Tips: Utilizing the Cropping Tool Al Bonner
PowerPoint is full of hidden tools that can help you improve the professional image of your presentation. This tutorial focuses on the “Cropping tool,” part of the Formatting Palette. The tool can help you trim your photos, alter images, add new creative touches and much more. Use these four tips as a starting point. Then experiment with your photos and quickly see how easy it is to add exciting new features to your slides.
Here are some of the most operative tips on jewelry photography editing using Photoshop that assure the images retouched are visually appealing to the targets.
Connecting Extreme Weather Events to Climate Change: Media Coverage of Heat ...Jill Hopke
This research tests the popular press assumption that media are not discussing climate change in coverage of extreme weather. Change over time in English-language media coverage of heat waves and wildfires is assessed, from 2013 to 2018, including 37 news outlets from five countries, as well as Agence France-Presse and Climatewire. Mentions of climate issues increased both types of extreme weather. Climatewire provided the highest degree of climate change issue attention. For Canada and the United States, climate change issue attention was higher than would be expected by chance in heat wave coverage, while it was roughly equal to what would be expected by chance for China, and lower for India and the United Kingdom. For wildfire coverage, issue attention to climate issues was higher than expected by chance for Canada, India, and the United Kingdom; lower for China and the United States. Elite, climate-specialist news outlets gave more attention to climate issues in both heat wave and wildfire reporting across the years studied. The 2013 to 2018 time period also saw an uptick in media coverage of heat waves, particularly in Chinese English-language media.
Research Talk: How to Tell More Compelling Climate Change StoriesJill Hopke
Slides from a research talk I gave at the DePaul University College of Communication faculty meeting on February 15, 2019. The question that drives my research is: How to tell more compelling climate change stories. My research includes social media and traditional media.
Social Media in Agenda-Setting: The Elsipogtog First Nation and Standing Rock...Jill Hopke
I am presenting research at the 9th Annual International Conference on Social Media and Society (#SMSociety) in Copenhagen, Denmark (July 18-20, 2018).
Jill Hopke (DePaul University, United States)
Molly Simis-Wilkinson (Independent Scholar, United States)
Patricia Loew (Northwestern University, United States)
Social Media in Agenda-setting: The Elsipogtog First Nation and Standing Rock Sioux Tribe
ABSTRACT. The Dakota Access Pipeline did not gain widespread attention until it was nearly complete, despite extensive opposition from the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe. It was not until images depicting repression circulated on social media that mainstream media and public attention spiked. We use shale gas exploration in New Brunswick, Canada and the Dakota Access Pipeline, as case studies of social media agenda-setting. We consider disruptive public participation to involve constituents who perceive themselves as outsiders to decision-making. In both cases protest was ongoing for significant periods before receiving mainstream media and public attention. Using mixed methods, we show that law enforcement and company crackdown on indigenous communities, and the circulation of dramatic visuals via Twitter, is associated with spikes in social media, as well as media and public attention.
A presentation prepared for the Archdiocese of Chicago's Office of Human Dignity and Solidarity, June 6, 2018.
Event description: "Join the Office of Human Dignity and Solidarity on Wednesday, June 6 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. as we answer Pope Francis’ call to 'each person on this living planet' to care for our common home. Because everyone’s home is different, creating effective campaigns around this initiative can be challenging. During this seminary, Assistant Professor of Journalism Jill Hopke of DePaul University will share insights from the latest social science research on how to design communication strategies that connect climate change to daily life and tips for choosing engaging climate visuals. Participants will get ideas for how to tell new narratives about the human toll of our changing climate, as well as for building community resiliency and climate hope."
The Moral Case for Sustainable InvestingJill Hopke
On Thursday, September 28 I will be giving a talk at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, joined by my colleague Luis Hestres (University of Texas at San Antonio), on sustainable and socially responsible investing.
The event is a conversation on the theme of “What is Sustainable and Socially Responsible Investing and Why Is It Important?” The event will take place Thursday, Sept. 28 at 3:30 p.m. in the UNCG Faculty Center. This conversation is hosted by the UNCG departments of Environmental & Sustainability Studies and Geography.
Internet-Mediated Climate Advocacy: History, Convergence and Future Outlook Jill Hopke
I will be presenting research, co-authored with Luis Hestres (University of Texas at San Antonio), at the 2017 conference of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) in Chicago August 10.
Research summary: The past two decades have transformed the ways political groups and individuals engage in collective action. Meanwhile, the climate change advocacy landscape, previously dominated by well-established environmental organizations, now accommodates new ones focused exclusively on this issue. This article examines the convergence of these trends through the examples of 350.org, the Climate Reality Project, and The Guardian’s “Keep It in The Ground” campaign. Implications for the future of Internet-mediated climate advocacy are discussed.
The Paris Climate Talks (COP21) in Visual Social MediaJill Hopke
I will be presenting research on visual social media during the 2015 Paris climate talks (COP21), a collaboration with Luis Hestres (University of Texas at San Antonio), at the 2017 International Conference on Social Media and Society at Ryerson University in Toronto, Canada July 30 (http://socialmediaandsociety.org). The conference is organized by the Social Media Lab at Ryerson.
Research summary: Within networked, digital media spaces, new news platforms are reconfiguring traditional news production norms through hybrid cultural practices, giving rise to new paradigms of journalism. There is an increased emphasis on transparency and accountability, as well as interaction with audiences. At the same time, Internet-mediated activism allows individuals to foster larger, more diverse networks of weak ties, thus opening new avenues for advocacy communication. Climate change is increasingly becoming the backdrop to news stories on topics as varied as politics and international relations, science and the environment, economics and inequality, and popular culture. We use the Conference of Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP21) that took place in Paris from November 30 to December 11, 2015, as a case study. The project focuses on COP21 coverage by British news outlet The Guardian, which launched a fossil fuel divestment campaign "Keep it in the Ground" in advance of COP21. We compare The Guardian's discussion of 'climate solutions' during COP21 with other news outlets and climate stakeholders.
The work-in-progress paper is available through ACM at: https://goo.gl/h38fYo.
Indigenous Resistances to Extractive Industry as Disruptive Public Participat...Jill Hopke
Research to be presented at the 2017 Conference on Communication and Environment (COCE), July 1, 2017, University of Leicester.
In fall 2016, violent images of the Dakota Access Pipeline protest near the Standing Rock Reservation stunned the world. Facebook users saw security guards sic attack dogs on Native women and children and police fire water cannons at praying protesters in subfreezing temperatures. However, the issue had not gained widespread mainstream media and public attention until the 1,172-mile pipeline was nearly complete, after more than two years of opposition from the tribe. It wasn’t until activists shared violent images on social media that public outrage forced policymakers to act. We argue that activities which heighten public attention to an issue through social media amplification constitute what we call disruptive public participation, which may empower activists and help “outsiders” become “insiders” in decision-making.
In both the Elsipogtog and Standing Rock cases, protest was ongoing for significant periods of time before they received widespread public attention. We argue that police crackdown on Indigenous communities and associated reports of violence and spikes in arrests of demonstrators are correlated with spikes in social media, as well as mainstream media, attention. The stakes of in-person involvement in protests are incredibly heightened. The circulation of violent images on social media—shared by “water protectors” on-the-ground and from outsiders offering solidarity and expressions of moral outrage—resulted in a spike in mainstream media attention.
Connecting on climate and energy: Finding common ground in an era of politica...Jill Hopke
The majority of voters support US global engagement on climate change. Following the presidential election, researchers at Yale and George Mason Universities found that seven in ten (69%) of registered voters agree with US participation in the Paris agreement on reducing global greenhouse gas emissions, including just more than half (51%) of Republicans. In this talk, drawing on my social media research on discourse about the COP21 Paris climate talks, protest over the Dakota Access Pipeline and hydraulic fracturing, as well as the broader field of climate change communication, I’ll explore ways in which we can connect meaningfully on climate action and energy issues in an era marked by political polarization on the issues.
Urgency to act on climate: Blurring boundaries of journalism and advocacy on ...Jill Hopke
A research poster for the International Conference on Social Media and Society in London, July 11 to 13, 2016 (http://socialmediaandsociety.org).
Authors: Jill Hopke and Luis Hestres
Background
In December 2015, representatives of 195 nations meeting in Paris for the Conference of the Parties (COP21) set an ambitious goal to reach net zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by the mid-century. During the talks climate activists took to social media to get out their message on climate justice. Before the official summit kicked off, activists held more than 2,300 events in over 175 countries in a Global Climate March, rallying around the shared goal, “Keep fossil fuels in the ground and finance a just transition to 100% renewable energy by 2050.” At the same time, international media attention to climate issues was heightened leading up to, and during, the climate talks.
Objective
We study Twitter posting during COP21 about fossil fuel divestment. We focus on COP21 coverage by the British news outlet The Guardian, which in 2015 launched its “Keep it in the Ground” advocacy campaign. We compare The Guardian’s posting during COP21 with other news outlets, climate stakeholders, and fossil fuel industry actors.
Better Digital Storytelling with a Smartphone: Core Design Elements Jill Hopke
Slides for a workshop for an audience of international journalists visiting DePaul University in Chicago, June 2016. Workshop learning objectives:
1) Understand key concepts in digital storytelling, as applied to news production, and be able to apply to story development on current political news example;
2) Improve photography with a smart phone for using in social media and/or digital news stories, plus in-the-field activity to practice concepts; and
3) Using Snapseed photo editing application to edit photos on a smart phone.
Slides for a workshop for an audience of international journalists visiting DePaul University in Chicago, June 2016. Workshop learning objectives:
1) Understand key concepts in digital storytelling, as applied to news production, and be able to apply to story development on current political news example;
2) Improve photography with a smart phone for using in social media and/or digital news stories, plus in-the-field activity to practice concepts; and
3) Using Snapseed photo editing application to edit photos on a smart phone.
Slides for a workshop for an audience of international journalists visiting DePaul University in Chicago, June 2016. Workshop learning objectives: 1) Increase understanding of a U.S. context for social media shifts in news production and consumption; 2) Learn practical ways to overcome “content shock;” 3) Apply social listening techniques to analyze ways in which U.S. and Georgian news outlets are covering current news (e.g. using Orlando Pulse nightclub terrorist attack as case study); and 4) Understanding of how to apply “design thinking” techniques to developing audience-centered social media strategy.
Slides for a workshop for an audience of international journalists visiting DePaul University in Chicago, June 2016. Workshop learning objectives: 1) Increase understanding of a U.S. context for social media shifts in news production and consumption; 2) Learn practical ways to overcome “content shock;” 3) Apply social listening techniques to analyze ways in which U.S. and Georgian news outlets are covering current news (e.g. using Orlando Pulse nightclub terrorist attack as case study); and 4) Understanding of how to apply “design thinking” techniques to developing audience-centered social media strategy.
Climate Activists Take to Social Media but Who are They Reaching? And why it ...Jill Hopke
In December 2015, representatives of 195 nations meeting in Paris for the Conference of the Parties (COP21) set an ambitious goal to reach net zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by the mid-century. During the talks climate activists took to social media to get out their message on climate justice. Before the official summit kicked off, activists held more than 2,300 events in over 175 countries in a Global Climate March, rallying around the shared goal, “Keep fossil fuels in the ground and finance a just transition to 100% renewable energy by 2050.” Global activism was impressive in scale, but did activists reach people on social media who are not already supporters of action on climate change? My analysis of social media during the climate summit shows little interaction between climate activists and the industry most closely associated with carbon emissions: oil and gas. In this talk I’ll explore what this might mean for future climate action and our collective ability to live up to the goals set at COP21.
The fossil fuel divestment part of this research project is in conjunction with my colleague Luis Hestres, of the University of Texas at San Antonio (http://www.luishestres.com).
Fracking, Elsipogtog First Nation, and the police: Examining the social media...Jill Hopke
A research presentation on the role of visual social media in amplifying protest against shale gas development in Canada. Presented at the Association for Politics and the Life Sciences (APLS) annual conference. Madison, Wisconsin, October 2015.
Hashtags as Publics: Global Frackdown Anti-fracking Movement Twitter PracticesJill Hopke
A presentation from the International Communication Association annual conference, May 2015, San Juan, Puerto Rico. I've published this research in the open access journal Social Media and Society. The full text is available at: http://sms.sagepub.com/content/1/2/2056305115605521.full.pdf+html
Talking about Fracking: A Contested Energy Technology on TwitterJill Hopke
A research presentation from the Conference on Communication and the Environment, June 2015, Boulder, Colorado. I have published this research, with colleague Molly Simis, in the journal Public Understanding of Science, see: http://pus.sagepub.com/content/early/2015/10/01/0963662515607725.abstract
Please contact me for the full text.
A presentation for undergraduate journalism students on using Twitter for research, as well as best practices for sourcing and verifying social content.
9. Crop
Image
• First
tap
“format”
icon
to
choose
aspect
ra6o
• Then,
tap
and
drag
the
edges
of
the
crop
area
to
resize
• Reposi6on
crop
by
tapping
and
dragging
the
crop
area
to
the
desired
loca6on
11. “Tune”
func6on
(click
“edit”
icon
in
lower
right)
• Brightness:
Darken
or
lighten
• Contrast:
Increase
or
decrease
the
overall
contrast
• Satura2on:
Add
or
remove
vibrancy
to
the
colors
• Ambiance:
Adjust
the
balance
of
light
• Shadows:
Darken
or
lighten
only
shadows
• Highlights:
Darken
or
lighten
only
highlights
• Warmth:
Add
a
warm
or
cool
color
cast
fully
image
12. Applying
“Tune”
func6ons
• In
each
“tune”
func6on
o Swipe
right
to
increase
the
value
o Swipe
le(
to
decrease
the
value
13. “Selec6ve”
adjustments
• Precise
enhancements
to
specific
areas
• Select
adjustment,
then
tap
the
desired
area
of
the
image
• Brightness
Lighten
or
darken
the
selected
area
• Contrast
Increase
or
decrease
contrast
of
the
selected
area
• Satura1on
Increase
or
decrease
color
vibrancy
of
selected
area
14. Allows
“non-‐destruc6ve”
edi6ng
• “Stacks”
func6on
(upper
right
#):
o Allows
changing
all
Tools
and
Filters
applied
to
image
o Copy
and
paste
edits
between
images
o Add
addi6onal
Tools
and
Filters,
o Adjust
slider
sebngs
16. “Save”
op6ons
• “Save”:
o Save
non-‐destruc6ve
edit
stack
on
original
image
• “Save
a
copy”:
• Save
non-‐destruc6ve
edit
stack
on
duplicate
image
(JPEG).
• “Export”:
• Save
duplicate
image,
with
edit
stack
flaKened
(JPEG).
17. “Share”
op6ons
• Share
the
image
by
tapping
icon
in
upper
right
and
select
“Share”
• Integrates
with
a
variety
of
social
pladorms
19. • World
Press
Photo
guidelines
on
manipula6on:
– hKp://www.worldpressphoto.org/
ac6vi6es/photo-‐contest/verifica6on-‐
process/what-‐counts-‐as-‐manipula6on
• Na6onal
Press
Photographers
Associa6on
“Code
of
Ethics”:
– hKps://nppa.org/code_of_ethics
Ethics
of
Digital
Edi6ng:
How
much
is
too
much?
20. • Some
tutorials
are
available
at:
– hKp://iphonephotographyschool.com/tag/
snapseed/
– hKp://iphonephotographyschool.com/snapseed-‐
edi6ng-‐app/
– hKps://support.google.com/snapseed/
Further
Learning
Resources