Sebek Fall 08 Thesis


Interview with Andrew Stanton for Wall-E
July 11, 2008, 7:38 pm
Filed under: Articles

Check this out for great examples of creative process:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=92400669



Helpful research hints
July 10, 2008, 5:57 pm
Filed under: HOW TO'S FOR THESIS

Hello Class-

I thought that it might be helpful to point you to some good habits as you read and research your topics and methodologies for your thesis projects and ideas. 

1. We are going to be scheduling Thesis Workshops on August 4th and 5th. We will be sending out more information on that as we get our room scheduling confirmed.

2. We are evaluating a new way for your class to share your research at http://www.citeulike.org/.  Remember that it is more efficient for several people to share research on a certain topic. At this site, you can great groups and comment on each other’s research. I have started a group called Parsons MFA DT 2008 Thesis Research. You can post articles there or create a group in a specific area of research. 

3. I got the helpful pointers below when I started my Master studies in Sociology. I’ve modified them a bit for you to apply to Design and Technology Research.  (See Below)

4. Remember that there are also helpful documents to help you do research at http://www.newschool.edu/admin/writingcenter/virtualdrawer.html.  You can use the University Writing Center to help get your research started and to get your summer paper done.  No matter how well you write, it is always good to get someone to look at your work.

ALSO: http://library.newschool.edu/

Don’t forget to visit your favorite collections, museums, and the librarians and custodians of those collections who will be able to help you. Many of you will be doing primary research by going to exhibitions, films, installations. It is important that you record your visits in your notebook, your filing cabinet(and/or website) and that you maintain good track of your thoughts and reactions to the work you see and the people you interview.

HELPFUL HINTS on how to read any website, article, magazine, trade journal, film, multimedia experience etc. In a way, we “read” everything we experience.

ALWAYS READ WITH A PURPOSE: moving your eyes across printed text is not reading! Reading with a purpose means asking a question (or, better yet, a system of questions) that you keep in mind as you progress and that helps you put the pieces of the puzzle together. So always identify from the outset what the author intends to do in the writing, what question s/he sets out to answer, how s/he proposes to do it, and what kind of arguments s/he develops (causal, historical, hermeneutic, etc.).

 

-SCAN AND SCOPE THE TEXT BEFOREHAND: you’ll do a much better job picking up the argument(s) in the text if you know in advance what to look for. For this, always scan the full text beforehand: flip through the pages, grab a few paragraphs here and there, pay attention to titles and subtitles, notice phrases in bold or italics, tables and figures (in particular their captions)—in short get a rough feel for what’s going on there. You can also read the first and last sentence or paragraph of every section, just to become familiar with the substance and tone of the argument(s). Then read the text in depth.

 

-READ AS A DESIGNER AND TECHNOLOGIST : this means identifying the problem the author is trying to resolve, the concepts s/he uses or develops for that purpose, the evidence s/he brings to bear on the issue, and the variety of mechanisms invoked. Reflect on the limitations, biases, gaps, and silences of both question and answer. Make an effort to resituate them in the broader constellation of design, social, historical etc. theories and research you are familiar with; never read a text in isolation: always relate it to other cognate texts you know (among them, those assigned for the same and prior weeks). Design and Technology arguments have a structure; your reading should locate and mimick it.

 

-READ DIFFERENTIALLY: do not treat all printed text in the same manner; “democratic reading” is analytically inefficient (even unsound); some parts of a text contain critical conceptual distinctions or causal arguments and should be read very cautiously (and repeatedly if necessary); others contain illustrative materials, empirical elaborations, or theoretical digressions and can be read more rapidly (and even sometimes skimmed or skipped). So allocate your time and effort wisely, in proportion to the difficulty and/or significance of the passage.

 

-ANNOTATE THE TEXT AS YOU READ: read with a pen or pencil in hand and mark the progression, twists, and turns of the argument as it unfolds. You can devise your own stenographic system (arrows, stars, circlings, underlinings, etc.) to highlight in a consistent and economical manner the main names and dates, key authors and references, definitions and logical turning points, salient illustrations, conclusions and implications, etc. But do not defeat your purpose and highlight everything!

 READING AND STUDYING:

-WRITE UP NOTES IMMEDIATELY AFTER READING: if you’ve read a text with an active analytical intention, you should be able to summarize and reconstruct the main lines of its argument(s). Immediately upon finishing your reading, write, type, or scribble a short recapitulation of what you just absorbed in telegraphic or diagrammatic form. What was the key question posed by the author, what answers were given to it, what concepts or theories were introduced, what evidence adduced, how does this or that thesis or theory differ from rival views, etc. Use your annotations and marginalia as guides and signposts; if the text introduces new concepts, make a note of them and write down their definition (as given by the author and/or as reconstructed by you); if it contrasts several phenomena or theories, enumerate what makes them different or similar. Use whatever devices (tables, lists, bullets, diagrams, etc.) give you the best synoptic and synthetic view of the piece you’ve read. Your reading notes will be invaluable self-teaching and learning aids for as long as you study.

 

-REFLECT BACK UPON THE TEXT AND EVALUATE THE ARGUMENT: never close a book or article without evaluating its argument: was it logically consistent and empirically adequate, plausible or convincing and why (not)? What alternative or rival arguments come to mind? Again, relate the text you’ve read to others you know (or mentioned by the author). Never take an author at face value, no matter how famous and authoritative; there is a lot of bulls– in social science writings, as in every other kind. It’s your job to separate the useful ideas like wheat from chaff. Also, do not be swayed by emotional appeals and moral exhortation: more often than not, good sentiments hide weak argumentation. Forsake the “logic of the trial”: the validity of an idea has nothing to do with how attractive or repulsive it is ethically or politically.

 

-DO NOT HESITATE TO READ A TEXT A SECOND, THIRD,… NTH TIME: a common myth among bad readers is that if you’ve read well a given text, you’re done for life. This makes no sense! A text may be “discovered” as many times as there are purposes for reading it. Genuinely complex and rich texts are profitably read several times over as each reading unhearths new layers, puzzles, and treasures. (Later you might come to own multiple copies of the important books you’ve read).

 

Remember the etymology of the verb to read: it comes from the Middle English, râeden, to advise. So heed this advice and be advised when you read.

 
 



More inspiration for Thesis topics

http://www.asci.org/artikel72.html

Many of you are wondering how to make a difference with your thesis ideas. Sometimes, it takes a bit of looking into the work of your peers to see how your ideas can be more inspired.

Here’s an organization (ASCI) that dedicates itself strictly to the intersection of art and science. This is where the MFA DT design discourse dwells as well. Check out ASCI member, Camille Seaman’s photo exhibit at: http://www.camilleseaman.com/Artist.asp?ArtistID=3258&Akey=WX679BJN. A stunning reportage of icebergs that are melting away as global warning takes its toll. Or…http://www.devorahsperber.com/ where Deborah Sperber analyzed the way that we see pixels and reproduced Master works with spools of colored thread. A revealing method for the way that human beings interpret the world through vision.

The late Robert Rauschenberg–a true pioneer in art/technology/science, for example, pioneered a relationship between artists and the engineers as Bell Labs. E.A.T. (Experiments in Art and Technology) The crossing of disciplines sparked innovation among the engineers as well as the artists. This is why looking at the intersection between design, technology and the human condition is a fertile field for innovation.

Check out:
http://www.asci.org/BellLabs/
http://www.wired.com/culture/lifestyle/news/2000/03/34840

As you are mining the world around your for thesis inspirations, check out what your MFA thesis peers are doing at other schools around the world.  Try to get in touch with them and begin a conversation (email is OK) with them.

For those of you who want to be challenged in the world of interaction, check out the topics for the call for papers of the ACM Multimedia Information Retrieval conference. Perhaps your thesis could be presented there in 2009.
Check out: http://press.liacs.nl/mir2008/…perhaps you will want to attend this year’s MIR to get a dose of inspiration in the fall.

Remember to begin with the end in mind.

Best,

Anezka



Anezka Sebek Bio
June 8, 2008, 9:08 pm
Filed under: PAGES

Anezka Sebek, Director of the Parsons MFA in Design and Technology Program (Associate Professor)
Indonesian-born Anezka Sebek has been fulltime faculty with Parsons The New School for Design’s MFA in Design and Technology since 1999. She coordinates the BFA Animation and Motion Graphics Sequence of electives and teaches in the Motion Research Collaboration and Thesis studios.

Her extensive professional career in the film industry includes projects for television, advertising, documentaries and feature films for such companies as R/Greenberg Associates,  HBO, Curious Pictures. She is best known as a Visual Effects and Computer Animation Producer for technologically complex projects that combine live-action with digital effects. She has written, produced, and directed music videos and short films and is currently pursuing a PhD in Sociology and Media at The New School for Social Research. Ms. Sebek has served on several ACM Siggraph Electronic and Animation Theater juries (www.siggraph.org), Ars Electronica, and also helped create UNESCO’s Africa Animated! http://www.africa-animated.org program in Nairobi, Kenya.

Ms. Sebek’s life’s work has focused on the environment, feminism, queer activism, and media literacy for youth.



STEVE BALLMER
June 8, 2008, 8:52 pm
Filed under: Articles | Tags: ,
http://www.c-spanarchives.org/library/index.php?main_page=product_video_info&products_id=205807-1   

If you haven’t decided on your thesis topic or focus yet, consider what Steve Ballmer talks about in his keynote speech at the Technology for Government Dinner a week ago. It’s a fun and rather elementary speech about the importance of all of the issues that we address in the MFA DT.  Whatever you decide to do for your Master’s thesis, consider the importance of the thesis in your life and of course in your career.  The fact is that there is a very large world in Media Technologies out there in which you will all hopefully be innovators. The immediate next decade that Steve Ballmer talks about is “more animated, more energetic, more innovation in technology….and also a world that will belong to media technologists. 
His speech chronicles his past 28 years having lived through 4 major innovation shifts:
1980-personal computer was born
1983 – 84 -graphical user interfaces were invented (at Apple–but he doesn’t say that!!)
1980s in general-The Internet with commodity internet in the early nineties-(shopping by the 1997)
1990s-Web 2.0 
Continuing now the established trends of: 
Processing Power — still twice as much power every 18 months (Moore’s law) faster, smaller, cheaper that shifted 5 years ago to multiple core computers. Every shift has mandated software transformation
Storage-capture (video/sound) of everything-cheaper, faster 
WI-FI-ubiquitous computing everywhere.
Paper thin screens and computers
The implications of technology on society and the way we live are vast. The time line is swift (next 10-20 years). 
Remember that there are several shifts that we, as current MFA DT citizens are witnessing just in the time that you have been here: 
1. The new paradigm of natural user interfaces – using every sense in the human body for interface applications (vision response, natural speech, touch, habits response etc.)
2. Web 3.0/Cloud Computing – essentially delivered by a group of powerful servers that contains massive databases in a distributed network. Turning the one way street of Yahoo, Google and Amazon scooping our data and flipping it into services (and tracking your life and subsequent purchases)  is something that all of you should be interested in. 
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/07_52/b4064048925836.htm
Not only because most of you will be ending up in this industry but also because it is transforming the way that we think about data, IP and access to information. Bottom line: Software and all information will be have to  available dynamically. 
3. Data visualization and simulation
4. Personal customization of data organization. 
5. Media/Advertising will be digitized at higher and better resolutions. Distribution of media will be on many platforms–if you’re doing an animated film, for example, it is even more important for you to be aware of how your assets are prepared and delivered. 
Hope that you’re all engaged in your explorations. Remember that your process is discovery through iteration. You should be making  small projects–TESTING them on your targeted communities–ANALYZING the results and continuing on to the next project. 
REMEMBER ALSO: Your summer homework is going to be graded and will count as part of your fall semester grade.
Anezka