A influência da informação fornecida pelos enfermeiros sobre a ansiedade pré-operatória
Gonçalves, Marco António Rodrigues
Type
article
Creator
Publisher
Identifier
SANCHES, Miguel (2022) - Laboratory practices applied to the developement of an independent editorial project. Convergências : Revista de Investigação e Ensino das Artes. ISSN 1646 - 9054. Vol. XV, nº 29, p. 13-20.
1646-9054
Title
Laboratory practices applied to the developement of an independent editorial project
Práticas laboratoriais aplicadas no desenvolvimento de um projeto editorial independente
Práticas laboratoriais aplicadas no desenvolvimento de um projeto editorial independente
Subject
Independent publication
Laboratory practices
Workshop production
Pedagogical project
Publicação independente
Práticas laboratoriais
Produção de workshops
Projeto pedagógico
Laboratory practices
Workshop production
Pedagogical project
Publicação independente
Práticas laboratoriais
Produção de workshops
Projeto pedagógico
Date
2022-07-14T14:52:51Z
2022-07-14T14:52:51Z
2022
2022-07-14T14:52:51Z
2022
Description
Os avanços tecnológicos e a presença esmagadora de ferramentas digitais no nosso dia-a-dia, têm necessariamente um impacto na prática do design, onde podemos encontrar cada vez mais preferência pelos canais de comunicação instantâneos e efémeros, em detrimento das técnicas de reprodução manual ou convencional. No que diz respeito às práticas pedagógicas, e particularmente nas áreas do design, há uma fome crescente de formação baseada em ferramentas digitais, onde o aluno se vê confrontado com a necessidade de apresentar uma resposta a um determinado problema, utilizando quase exclusivamente software gráfico conhecido. Este artigo visa demonstrar, através de um exemplo prático, como os estudantes podem ser encorajados a procurar soluções gráficas através de práticas laboratoriais, utilizando ferramentas analógicas, onde os resultados apresentados foram muitas vezes moldados por esta prática e não apenas uma solução padrão proposta por um software. O exemplo apresentado neste artigo baseia-se no projeto editorial extracurricular, i.E. Magazine, que os estudantes da Licenciatura em Design e Tecnologia Gráfica (DGAT) do Instituto Politécnico de Tomar (PIT) desenvolveram nos últimos anos, com o objetivo de contribuir para a aprendizagem fora da sala de aula, incentivando a utilização de equipamento e materiais fornecidos pelos laboratórios de impressão desta instituição. Esta revista é propriedade dos estudantes da DGAT e tem servido como plataforma para explorar os laboratórios de impressão do PIT, mas também como uma forma de os estudantes se expressarem, sem o compromisso de responder a um exercício, programa ou problema colocado na sala de aula. Os estudantes que abraçam este projeto são responsáveis pela escolha de todo o conteúdo escrito, pelo pedido externo de artigos, pela recolha ou produção de imagens e ilustrações, pelo design e layout, pela escolha de materiais e meios de produção, pela impressão e acabamento e pela distribuição. Na primeira parte deste artigo, pretendemos abordar principalmente questões relacionadas com a publicação independente - o termo é aqui utilizado, não como uma caracterização fechada e definitiva, mas apenas para distinguir uma área de edição, para além dos meios tradicionais de criação, produção, divulgação e distribuição - a fim de compreender o seu contexto e reconhecer como este tipo de edição leve, sem recursos e, quase sempre, sem um objetivo comercial pode influenciar a escolha de ferramentas, materiais e recursos, como meio de produzir um objeto gráfico. Numa segunda parte, tentaremos explorar como a experimentação e exploração de técnicas de produção tradicionais num contexto de oficina pode levar o estudante a resultados inesperados, muitas vezes impostos por limitações técnicas, laboratoriais ou temporais relacionadas com a utilização de técnicas de produção quase artesanal. Para uma terceira parte deste trabalho, apresentaremos as abordagens adotadas na produção da sexta edição da revista i.E., que normalmente começa com um conjunto de limitações apresentadas pelo editor e que os estudantes pretendem resolver à medida que exploram as diferentes soluções que as práticas laboratoriais permitem. Para cada uma das edições desta revista é essencial utilizar os espaços laboratoriais oferecidos pela PIT, tornando o aluno consciente de uma realidade muito mais ampla que aqueles que pode encontrar no computador, em ferramentas digitais, ou mesmo dentro de uma sala de aula tradicional. Com este artigo esperamos conseguir que o acesso a outros métodos de aprendizagem mais experimentais permita amplificar a visão criativa do aluno e torne possível melhorar os processos de aprendizagem. As metodologias colaborativas utilizadas no contexto de um workshop são relevantes nas práticas de design gráfico e editorial, colocando o designer também como autor, colaborador e produtor, capaz de ditar conteúdos de alto valor e soluções práticas. A revisão dos processos e ferramentas criativas utilizadas, transforma o designer enquanto autor, num profissional mais informado e consciente, permitindo a abordagem às tecnologias tradicionais e contribuindo para o seu reconhecimento e aplicabilidade num contexto profissional.
Abstract : Technological advances and overwhelming presence of digital tools in our day-to-day lives, necessarily have an impact on the practice of design, where we can increasingly find preference for the instantaneous and ephemeral communication channels, in detriment of manual or conventional reproduction techniques. Concerning teaching practices, and particularly in the areas of design, there is an increasing hunger for training based on digital tools, where the student is faced with the need to present an answer to a certain problem, using almost exclusively known graphic software’s. This article aims to demonstrate, through a practical example, how students can be encouraged to look for graphic solutions through laboratory practices, using analogue tools, where the results presented were often shaped by this practice and not just a standard solution proposed by a software.The example presented in this paper is based on the extracurricular editorial project, i.E. Magazine, that students of the Degree in Design and Graphic Arts Technology (DGAT) of the Polytechnic Institute of Tomar (PIT) have developed in recent years, with the objective of contributing to learning outside the clas-sroom, encouraging the use of equipment and mate-rials provided by the printing labs of this institution. This magazine is owned by DGAT students and has served as a platform for exploring the PIT printing laboratories, but also as a way for students to express themselves, without the commitment to respond to an exercise, program or problem placed in the classroom. The students that embrace this project are responsible for the choice of all the written content, for the external request for articles, for the collection or production of images and illustrations, for the design and layout, for the choice of materials and means of production, for the printing and finishing and for the distribution.In the first part of this paper, we pretend to address mainly issues related to independent publication – the term is used here, not as a closed and definitive characterization, but only in order to distinguish an area of editing, apart from the traditional means of creation,production, dissemination and distribution – in order to understand its context and recognize how this kind of light-hearted edition, without resources and, almost always, without a commercial objective can influence the choice of tools, materials and resources, as a mean to produce a graphic object. In a second part we will try to explore how the experimentation and exploration of traditional production techniques in a workshop context can lead the student to unexpected results, often imposed by technical, laboratory or time-based limitations related to the use of almost artisanal production techniques.For a third part of this paper, we will present the approaches taken in the production of the sixth edition of the i.E. Magazine that usually starts with a set of limitations presented by the editor and that the students plan to solve as they explore the different solutions that laboratory practices allow. For each of the issues of this magazine it is essential to use the laboratory spaces offered by PIT, making the student conscious of a much wider reality that those they can found on the computer, on digital tools, or even within a ional classroom.With this article we hope to accomplish that having access to other, more experimental learning methods, allows amplifying the student's creative vision and makes it possible to improve the learning processes. The collaborative methodologies used in the context of a workshop are relevant in the practices of graphic and editorial design, placing the designer also as an author, collaborator and producer, capable of dictating high-value content and practical solutions. The review of creative processes and tools used, transforms the designer as an author, into a more informed and cons-cious professional, allowing the approach to traditional technologies and contributing to their recognition and applicability in a professional context.
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Abstract : Technological advances and overwhelming presence of digital tools in our day-to-day lives, necessarily have an impact on the practice of design, where we can increasingly find preference for the instantaneous and ephemeral communication channels, in detriment of manual or conventional reproduction techniques. Concerning teaching practices, and particularly in the areas of design, there is an increasing hunger for training based on digital tools, where the student is faced with the need to present an answer to a certain problem, using almost exclusively known graphic software’s. This article aims to demonstrate, through a practical example, how students can be encouraged to look for graphic solutions through laboratory practices, using analogue tools, where the results presented were often shaped by this practice and not just a standard solution proposed by a software.The example presented in this paper is based on the extracurricular editorial project, i.E. Magazine, that students of the Degree in Design and Graphic Arts Technology (DGAT) of the Polytechnic Institute of Tomar (PIT) have developed in recent years, with the objective of contributing to learning outside the clas-sroom, encouraging the use of equipment and mate-rials provided by the printing labs of this institution. This magazine is owned by DGAT students and has served as a platform for exploring the PIT printing laboratories, but also as a way for students to express themselves, without the commitment to respond to an exercise, program or problem placed in the classroom. The students that embrace this project are responsible for the choice of all the written content, for the external request for articles, for the collection or production of images and illustrations, for the design and layout, for the choice of materials and means of production, for the printing and finishing and for the distribution.In the first part of this paper, we pretend to address mainly issues related to independent publication – the term is used here, not as a closed and definitive characterization, but only in order to distinguish an area of editing, apart from the traditional means of creation,production, dissemination and distribution – in order to understand its context and recognize how this kind of light-hearted edition, without resources and, almost always, without a commercial objective can influence the choice of tools, materials and resources, as a mean to produce a graphic object. In a second part we will try to explore how the experimentation and exploration of traditional production techniques in a workshop context can lead the student to unexpected results, often imposed by technical, laboratory or time-based limitations related to the use of almost artisanal production techniques.For a third part of this paper, we will present the approaches taken in the production of the sixth edition of the i.E. Magazine that usually starts with a set of limitations presented by the editor and that the students plan to solve as they explore the different solutions that laboratory practices allow. For each of the issues of this magazine it is essential to use the laboratory spaces offered by PIT, making the student conscious of a much wider reality that those they can found on the computer, on digital tools, or even within a ional classroom.With this article we hope to accomplish that having access to other, more experimental learning methods, allows amplifying the student's creative vision and makes it possible to improve the learning processes. The collaborative methodologies used in the context of a workshop are relevant in the practices of graphic and editorial design, placing the designer also as an author, collaborator and producer, capable of dictating high-value content and practical solutions. The review of creative processes and tools used, transforms the designer as an author, into a more informed and cons-cious professional, allowing the approach to traditional technologies and contributing to their recognition and applicability in a professional context.
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Access restrictions
openAccess
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Language
eng
Comments