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That's hilarious! The things you learn on Photrio...Engineers don't need to know anything about business; businesses hire them as fulltime employees and pay them well.

That's hilarious! The things you learn on Photrio...Engineers don't need to know anything about business; businesses hire them as fulltime employees and pay them well.
That's hilarious! The things you learn on Photrio...![]()
You are an extreme exception. Surely you aren't so blind to not realize that.
The photography business is constantly changing... does the university in question have any faculty members who understands how it works?
ASMP is a good organization to learn some of it, especially copyright issues.
Of course the path for those with academic degrees in photography (usually an MFA since the '70s) is to go into teaching undergraduates. But there are many more newly-minted MFAs every year than open teaching positions...
I am really surprised at the push-back you are getting on this.How about courses on basic marketing and setting up a website? Luck, they'll have to get elsewhere.
If they're going to never make a living out of it, should we be encouraging youngsters to go into debt for $100,000. Tell them to go get a job as an apprentice for a wedding photographer.
I am really surprised at the push-back you are getting on this.
Your idea is, simply, to help photography students make a success of their photo career.
Poole, for some reason, are totally getting hung-up on what degree a person is pursuing, and even adding a 'business degree' to that.
Why does it need to be a degree at all.?
What would be wrong with inviting professional photographers to come and give talks on 'the basics' of running a photo business. They could discuss what has been important to their success, what mistakes they made................you know, things they wish they would not have done, and some things they would do different if starting out now..........like these students will be.
The idea is to help people, not obsess on the technicalities of such and such a degree.
The spirit of all this was not to debate the 'correct' paradigm of higher education.![]()
Matt, the students in a FIne Arts program are not really aware of any difference between what they are doing and vocational training, since they have to do so much actual production of work to graduate. So, the distinction you keep trying to make doesn't really make a lot of sense.
@VinceInMT, for example, wasn't just sitting in a room looking at slideshows of paintings and reading up on art history. He was engaged in practice and, essentially, artistic training - I doubt he would have gone if he had not.
The end of many Fine Arts programs often involves a gallery show of student work - I think most programs have them yearly.
In other words, students are not ever led to believe that they are not actually being trained to be working artists. So what would be the problem with introducing practical business concerns, to a relevant extent?
Matt, the students in a FIne Arts program are not really aware of any difference between what they are doing and vocational training, since they have to do so much actual production of work to graduate. So, the distinction you keep trying to make doesn't really make a lot of sense.
@VinceInMT, for example, wasn't just sitting in a room looking at slideshows of paintings and reading up on art history. He was engaged in practice and, essentially, artistic training - I doubt he would have gone if he had not.
The end of many Fine Arts programs often involves a gallery show of student work - I think most programs have them yearly.
In other words, students are not ever led to believe that they are not actually being trained to be working artists. So what would be the problem with introducing practical business concerns, to a relevant extent?
Don, I have no problem with adding some practical, "how to survive and prosper as a working artist" material to a Fine Arts focused curriculum - if it makes sense in the context of that particular faculty, and the resources available to it. Otherwise, it would probably make sense to refer students to other resources, and potentially work out arrangements for their obtaining degree credit for making use of those other resources.
But that is very different than training to be a successful operator of a commercial or professional photography business, whether large or small. This BFA program doesn't appear in any way to be suited to that.
But that is very different than training to be a successful operator of a commercial or professional photography business, whether large or small. This BFA program doesn't appear in any way to be suited to that.
Right, no one is saying that. Did anyone think someone was saying that?To repeat: No one is saying a BFA should be a business program.
Did anyone think someone was saying that?
...training to be a successful operator of a commercial or professional photography business, whether large or small. This BFA program doesn't appear in any way to be suited to that.
No one is suggesting it should be. @Alan Edward Klein said some courses to inform students the things they'd need to work for themselves. Others here suggested workshops about the practical reality of working in a particular field. It's actually quite surprising that you would think anyone suggests a BFA should train someone to be a "successful operator of a commercial or professional photography business". You don't even need to know how to turn on a camera to run a professional photography business (although I imagine most do) - you need to know how to run a business.
But the reality, as pointed out by several in this thread, is that many people will try to be photographers and have no idea of how to approach the business side of it. An owner/operator business doesn't require a degree in business to run successfully. It would not hurt to introduce students who will potentially be such owner/operators of the basic requirements and challenges they will face.
Altogether too often, a perfectly reasonable suggestion is blown out of proportion in this forum.
To repeat: No one is saying a BFA should be a business program.
To repeat: No one is saying a BFA should be a business program.
Right, no one is saying that. Did anyone think someone was saying that?
If he's not saying that, then what exactly is he arguing against?
But that is very different than training to be a successful operator of a commercial or professional photography business, whether large or small. This BFA program doesn't appear in any way to be suited to that.
Neither Matt nor anyone else is saying BFA should be a business program.
They have a darkroom and offer two darkroom classes !
Neither Matt nor anyone else is saying BFA should be a business program.
However a few insist that a BFA must include a business program especially of the BFA student does not want to be involved in business or the business portion of the field. "Here! Drink this poison! It will be good for you because you do not want it!"
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