Boston’s Tattooed Sought for Marathon Themed Photo Project
A portrait session will be held in September for people who received ink related to the April 15 attacks. South End Patch News
Mothers and Kids Photo Gallery: Add Yours for Mother’s Day
Yes, this Sunday, May 12, is Mother’s Day. To honor moms — and in particular, your mom, we’re asking Patch readers to add photos of themselves with their moms, or Patch moms with their kids. And if you are so inspired, we’d like you to also answer this question: what do you/did you like best about your mom? Just click that Upload Photos and Videos button. It’s easy. South End Patch
Photo Contest: Your Lucky Charm
St. Patrick’s Day is a fun holiday for so many reasons — wear green, go to a parade, eat corned beef, drink beer, pretend to be Irish. Patch wants to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day with you by asking you to share a photo of your Lucky Charm (it can be a person, an animal, even an actual lucky charm like a rabbit’s foot). In the caption, share the story of why this charm brings you luck! To add your photo: Simply click the green “Upload Your Photos and Videos” button above and upload your image (but first make sure you’re a registered Patch user – if you aren’t one already, just click the Sign Up button in the top right corner of the home page) In the caption, share the story of why this charm brings you luck! We look forward to your submissions! South End Patch
Through a Teacher’s Eyes: New Photo Project By Boston Educator
“A student has to be a valedictorian – or bring a gun to school – in order to be considered newsworthy,” says Amika Kemmler-Ernst. An educator for more than 40 years, she’s talking about our tendency to focus on either the great or the horrible, while paying less attention to everything in between. A teacher of children and a mentor to teachers, Dr. Kemmler-Ernst is now officially retired. But in an ongoing visual ethnography project, she’s been visiting Boston Public Schools (BPS) and taking pictures of normal kids in action, learning at school. It’s a passion she’s indulged in throughout a career teaching in Brookline, Boston, around Africa, and in Italy. Shelved at her Jamaica Plain home, bulging albums hold photos of kids at work, in their classrooms, and on the field trips of her own design. Always, she asks students to add their own words to explain what’s they are doing in the pictures. “I wanted to find a way to celebrate ordinary kids,” says Kemmler-Ernst. A photographer who’s not into camera lenses and gadgets, Kemmler-Ernst’s tool of choice is a modest point-and-shoot that she uses without a flash, the better to blend in during the mornings she’s making pictures at a school. She looks for kids engaged in their work. With a circling motion of her arm, she redirects students to turn away from her and not pose for the camera. After editing the photos, she returns to the classrooms to ask the students in the pictures to explain what they are doing and learning. (Schools help select photos for publication and check media permissions.) The resulting text and photos become tabloid-page-size stories about individual schools, currently being published as a series by the Boston Teachers Union on their website and newsletter under the title, “We’re Learning Here.” Mostly teachers are exposed to Kemmler-Ernst’s work. She’s gratified when she hears from a teacher that her stories themselves can instruct. But she also wishes the general public were more aware of all the good happening in BPS. Kemmler-Ernst recalls noticing during her own graduate studies at Harvard that much research looks at pathology, examines what doesn’t work, and focuses on the negative. So while her “We’re Learning Here” series intentionally deals with the everyday, there are always small surprises to be discovered. For example, during her recent visit to the Clapp Innovation School in Dorchester, Kemmler-Ernst peeked in on a P.E. class. The teacher, Ms. Scott, was working on a yoga lesson. But what struck Kemmler-Ernst was that the walls were papered with word lists, used for spelling and vocabulary purposes in many a classroom. But here, in the gym, an uncommon […]