Don't know what this thread has escalated into, BUT my experience of the HND course is beginning to change, rapidly!
Almost 4 assignments in, I've not picked up ANYTHING about photography I haven't already heard of and there aren't classes or teaching on the techniques I wanted to pick up on. When we did Portraiture I would of expected to spend a lot of time learning to use studio flash & get to grips with OCF too. Not the case, most of the time was spent researching Art movements from the Renaissance etc, picking one and recreating it & a contemporary version.
When we did Scapes in B&W film, I was loving the darkroom as it was a new experience to me. Would of like to of had in-depth learning on the use of filters & get the general gist of hyperfocal focusing.
As for workbooks - well I tend to spend more time behind a camera (Scout n' About) than I do behind a pen!
Rant over I guess
That's a shame. I know of some great HND courses. Yours still might be.. it just may not be for you.
I'm not completely defending your course... as I can't, but have you considered that the act of re-creating the lighting found in a Carravagio or a Rembrandt would have actually taught you a great deal? If you sat through a 2 hour demonstration and practice session of studio lighting, you'd probably be happy as a student because you're doing studio lighting but unless you practice it, it's all for nothing. Recreating lighting from another piece of work is actually a fantastic way to learn how to use lighting when you're starting out. I'm assuming at some point there was a demonstration of how to use the studio lighting? I'm pretty sure they didn't just give a lecture on classic painters, and say "There you go... some lights in there.. get on with it". The idea is you practice. Did you? How many hours have you spent practising in your studio? I could spend hours teaching you to ride a bike with practical demonstration, but unless you practice it yourself.. a lot.. you'll never be able to ride a bike.
As for workbooks... that's a mistake though. They're incredibly useful. I still use a sketchbook/Log book/Work book to this day. How else can you plan your shots? You can't get all your images by walking around. If you shoot sport/press, street or documentary, weddings etc. maybe, but anything else you you need to be planning your shots, analysing them post shoot, developing ways to move your work forward. Every professional I know, at some level or another uses a sketch book to develop ideas. All creatives do, no matter if they are a writer, painter, photographer, film maker... makes no difference. You should be recording your inspiration, thoughts, and analysis of your work, and that of others.
There should also be some pretty robust business modules on you course too, and I hope you engage with those. You'll be a freelance.. self-employed. You need insight into the industry, and entrepreneurial skills, and people skills... your course should have a industry related module. Pay attention to that... do not think "this is all business stuff.. what's this got to do with photography". If you do... you'll have missed a vital part of your course.
Sounds to me like what you were expecting was training... not education. There's a massive difference.
Darkroom stuff is always great. I'll be teaching second years wet plate collodion today... woohooo!! My fingers will be black from silver nitrate by 4pm. Proper photography
