Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Documenting Your Memoirs with a Life Scrapbook

Scrapbooking is a popular hobby in the United States.  The craft of scrapbooking typically takes an event or a day in the life—a vacation, my son’s first haircut, our anniversary—and places photos and mementos from the event on one or more pages.  Some people do journaling, adding a few words or paragraphs to the pages to describe the event.  Many people place an emphasis on making the pages visually appealing, using a wide variety of techniques and background papers, stamps, stickers, ribbons, buttons, and other items.

Last year, I created a special kind of scrapbook: a life scrapbook or visual memoir to document my life from childhood to the present-day.  I found the process of creating the scrapbook and the end result to be personally rewarding.

This posting:
  • Introduces you to the concept of the life scrapbook and reasons to create one
  • Provides example pages to give you an idea of the content
  • Gives you some tips and steps to take in creating one for yourself.

I will have a separate posting next month which will give you tips on creating this life scrapbook digitally.  (Update: here is the link to the second posting titled Tips for Creating a Life Scrapbook Digitally.)

THE LIFE SCRAPBOOK

I created the term life scrapbook to differentiate its purpose from the typical scrapbooking done today.


A life scrapbook is:
  • About you.  It is not about your child, your friends, your social networks.  It is about who you are, where you came from, how you have evolved, what you have done, what you have experienced.
  • A life story.  It is not a single event.  It represents the accumulation of several years, perhaps your entire lifetime.
  • Visual.  It includes photos, newspaper clippings, documents, and other items that are meaningful to you.
  • Reflective.  It includes some text to help give context to the mementos.
  • A scrapbook.  It can use the same traditional and modern scrapbooking techniques.

There are several reasons to create a life scrapbook.  I will group them into four key reasons.

The first reason is to organize your mementos.  The process of creating your life scrapbook gives you the opportunity to organize the "shoebox" of stuff you have laying around in the house, in the attic, in storage, and at someone else's house.  It allows you to save the meaningful items and capture them in a single place.  With your mementos organized, you can leave an historical record for your descendants, perhaps starting or continuing a tradition.

A second reason is to enjoy your memories.  Creating and viewing your life scrapbook helps you reminisce on your life experiences.  You may enjoy sharing your experiences visually with others.  It will help you preserve important memories before you forget them.

A third reason is to learn about yourself.  The process of creating your life scrapbook can be highly enriching.  You can take stock in where you have been and how you have evolved.  It allows you to "reframe" or learn from the past so you can move forward.  It can serve as input in planning your future.

A fourth reason is to have fun.  A life scrapbook gives you the opportunity to be creative about a subject you know about.  You can express your own personality in each page you create.  The end result is a one-of-a-kind, personal gift that you can give yourself.  It is priceless.

EXAMPLE OF A LIFE SCRAPBOOK

Below are some example pages from the life scrapbook that I created for myself.  The pages are intentionally displayed in low resolution as I want the focus to be on the ideas and not on the personal content.

I have a preface to my life scrapbook.  It is all text.  It describes why I created the scrapbook.


There are many ways to organize a life scrapbook.  Through the process of creating the scrapbook, I identified seven key themes in my life.  I used these themes to organize my scrapbook, and this key themes page became the table of contents.


I mentioned a key reason for creating a life scrapbook is to learn about yourself during the creation process.  You can do several personal exercises early on in the process.  I created a personal timeline using the History template in the Personal Compass by Grove Consultants International, which helps examine your past places, occupations, ups and downs, dreams, and key learnings.  It is perfect for inclusion in a life scrapbook.


Many people think of scrapbooks as simply lots of photos.  While photos are important, I only have two full pages of photos of me in the entire scrapbook.


I created a consistent section header page for each theme which lists the highlights.  Several pages follow each section header page with the details.


Some of my pages do relate to key events in my life.  This page has mementos from an Outward Bound experience that piqued my interest in nature and adventure travel.


These are just a few of the many pages in my life scrapbook.  They can serve as ideas for you.  Once you get started, your life scrapbook will take on its own unique style that is you.

TIPS ON CREATING A LIFE SCRAPBOOK

Avoid accepting any excuses you may have.
  • "My life is not interesting enough."  No one else has ever or will ever live your life.  It is unique.  And once you start uncovering your past, you will be amazed at how interesting it has been.
  • "It feels vain to do my own."  No one else has the knowledge you have about yourself.  If not you, who?
  • "The task is overwhelming.  I don't have the time."  Take it slowly and in bite-size chunks.  You don't have to go through all of your boxes of mementos in one day.  Spread them out over several weeks or months.  It is the process that you go through, not how quickly you go through it, that enriches and rewards you.
  • "I don't have any material from my past."  This is the only good excuse--if it is true.  I have some suggestions below on gathering memorabilia that may help.

There are two components of scrapbooking: the content and the presentation.  The content refers to your life story and the memorabilia available to visually support your life story.  Steps to perform for the content include:
  • Determining your audience
  • Gathering memorabilia
  • Setting the purpose and messages
  • Organizing your content

Determining your audience may seem strange, but it is an important one.  Who are you creating it for?  If it is just yourself, you can be more intimate and create a scrapbook closer to a private diary.  If for your close relatives or descendants, and perhaps even for some of your close friends, you can be personal.  If a broad audience, keep privacy in mind.

There are three avenues to pursue in gathering memorabilia.  You should pursue the first two and only use the third avenue if you have no mementos available from the other avenues.

What you have Papers, letters, photographs, certificates, newspaper articles, yearbooks, trophies, ribbons, items you can photograph or scan
What you can ask for Items other people have, items organizations have (e.g. school transcripts), items retrievable in a library or archive
What you can recreate (not recommended) Drawings to substitute, recreations of objects and papers

After you have determined the audience and reviewed the memorabilia gathered, you can draft the purpose and key messages you want to convey about your life.  The purpose and messages can evolve as you continue to go through the process of creating your scrapbook, but this initial draft can keep you focused and structured.

Some of your key messages can revolve around what you have done, where you have been, how you have evolved, and what you have learned.

You should also think about how you want to organize your content.  Most people only think about chronological order.  Other possibilities include organization around key messages, key events in your life, things that are important to you, the people in your life, and how other people describe you.  You can do a combination of these.  I organized mine around key themes in my life and chronological within each theme.

Use the purpose and memorabilia you have available as a guide.  If you keep diaries or journals, reread them to look for patterns.  Through these activities and through introspection, you will be able to determine the best organization method for your life scrapbook.

I will discuss the presentation component and tips on digital scrapbooking in another posting.  (Update: here is the link to this second posting titled Tips for Creating a Life Scrapbook Digitally.)


Happy scrapbooking!

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Ideas for a New Genre of Journalism: Bona Fide Journalism

Good journalism is more difficult for me to find these days.  I fondly recall the CNN Headline News of the 1980's (not the one today):  30 minutes; mainly facts; no intentional slant; a single newscaster; no banter; no yelling; no fluff.  Granted, it was not in-depth reporting, but the newscast gave you enough accurate information to understand the situation and make an informed opinion.  It is possible my recollections of the 'good old days' are faulty; perhaps journalism has always been slanted or sensational, and I simply have become more observant or wiser.

I have a few ideas on journalism for someone or some group to run with.  These ideas suggest a new kind of journalism for people like me.  I call it bona fide journalism.  I do not have all the answers.  I know the subject is more complex than I make it out to be.  My hope is you can start with these ideas, improve them, enhance them, and make them a reality.

This posting presents three ideas:
  • Idea 1 - Bona fide journalism
  • Idea 2 - Critique journalism
  • Idea 3 - Time-elapsed news article
Please note my ideas are not intended to replace or supersede other journalistic styles or genres that may have some of the same objectives, such as investigative or collaborative journalism.  Bona fide journalism is an additional form.

IDEA 1 - A NEW KIND OF JOURNALISM:  BONA FIDE JOURNALISM

I will introduce this new kind of journalism through a framework depicting a spectrum of journalistic genres.

Aside note: I have drawn the spectrum vertically to remove any reference to a “far right” or “far left” of the spectrum as those terms have negative political connotations which are not relevant to this discussion.
(Click to enlarge)
The middle row of the spectrum refers to the genre of objective journalism.  Objective means not being influenced by personal feelings or opinions in considering and representing the facts.  The journalist writes or presents a news report independent of his or her beliefs.  All sides of the story are presented as to be neutral or impartial.  As equal weight is given to all sides, credence may be given to a position even if the facts do not exist to support it.  Filtering and analysis are avoided, otherwise questions of bias may surface.

Advocacy journalism or agenda-based journalism shown in the bottom row of the spectrum is driven by the position being advocated.  The opinion is pre-conceived and intentionally drives what facts to present, what facts not to present, and, for the unscrupulous practitioners, what misleading or false statements to include.  Advocacy-based journalism is transparent about their going-in position; the Sierra Club and National Rifle Association, as examples, are up-front about their views and what they advocate.  Agenda-based journalism is not transparent and may present itself with an ambiguous or misleading name or tagline.

I have coined the term bona fide journalism both for what it stands for and to avoid confusion with other terms used to describe existing journalistic genres and styles. Bona fide comes from the Latin meaning 'with good faith.' As an adjective, it means genuine or real. As an adverb, it means sincerely, without intention to deceive.

Bona fide journalism is genuine, real, sincere, and done in good faith.  Unlike agenda-based journalism, there is no preconception of a position since the facts must be gathered first.  Unlike objective journalism, there is additional value-add to the journalistic process: facts are vetted beyond verification to include truthfulness (“yes, that he yelled ‘fire!’ in the theater is an accurate statement, but we should also add that there was no fire in the theater”) and analysis is performed on facts to corroborate or refute opinions.  Bona fide journalism is transparent in its approach of providing facts and presenting the analysis, all done in good faith.

So how does this model play out in real-life journalism?  One example can be taken from a controversy being covered in the U.S. media in August 2010.  The controversy relates to the permission to build an Islamic community center two blocks from the former World Trade Center towers in Manhattan that were destroyed by a terrorist attack in 2001.  The phrase “ground zero mosque” is being used in the media to refer to the Islamic community center.
  • Agenda-based journalism will use the phrase heavily as it supports the opinion being espoused.
  • Objective journalism will use the phrase frequently as it keeps a neutral position and provides the talking points as espoused by each side, even if the facts are inaccurate, misleading, or absent.
  • Bona fide journalism will document the phrase sparingly and provide the true facts and analysis that support or refute the phrase.  Is it at “ground zero”?  No.  Is it planned to be a "mosque"?  It is a community center with a mosque.
As the phrase is not a correct representation of the facts, it is unfortunate that the journalistic genres practiced today promote its use.  A search using Google on the phase as of this writing returned over 63 million results.

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I appreciate several of the guiding principles of objective journalism.  Verification of facts, independence from outside groups, and neutrality in the going-in position are all important.  Bona fide journalism helps the reader or viewer get closer to the truth and make more informed opinions by providing facts and analysis not encouraged in objective journalism.  This includes: vetting of the facts beyond verification; refutation of misleading facts, half-truths, and false statements; collection of additional relevant facts, including context; and analysis of opinions based on the information.

Some guidelines for writing bona fide journalism in print

Bona fide journalism uses a new writing style.  The text is straightforward.  Section headings and bulleted lists are encouraged to give structure.  Tables and visuals are used to help improve the delivery of the facts and analysis.  Conceptually, refer to the posting on Information Mapping to get an idea.

Sensational and misleading words are avoided.  Headlines should avoid bias.  This example shows different headlines for the same news story.  Of the three displayed below, The Boston Globe provides the best headline for bona fide journalism.

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Quotes are never to be taken out of context.

Portions of a sentence of a quote are never to be used.  This example below quotes a single word ('dictatorial') without context, which would not be allowed in bona fide journalism.

Gabe Pressman, an NBC journalist and former chairman of the New York Press Club, has seen many mayors come and go. He has been reporting on the Big Apple since 1954. He finds Bloomberg's management style, particularly his dealings with the press, "dictatorial."
From the Huffington Post, August 9, 2010

Links to full interviews or articles should be provided if quotes are used in the news report.  Both the questions and the answers should be provided.

A news report should be subdivided into five sections.

Section Description
Header Key characteristics of the news report to help set proper expectations.  These characteristics include:
  • Type of report (article, opinion, editorial, advertisement)
  • Headline - what the report is about
  • Author and editor
  • Date published and last updated
Synopsis One to four bullet points that summarize the key facts and analysis of the news report.
Facts The facts, bullet points and visuals encouraged.  Facts should have sources referenced in the sources section.  The facts should be organized for ease of understanding.
Analysis If appropriate for the news report, the journalist's assessment of the situation based on the facts
Sources A listing of all sources referenced in the news report so a reader can fully view referenced articles and interviews and obtain more information

Only vetted and relevant facts are listed in the facts section.  There is no value in promulgating rumors and false statements.

Skillsets Required

Doing bona fide journalism right is tough.  It requires a certain set of skills, values, and knowledge typical of good journalists, including attention to detail, writing skills, fact-checking skills, interviewing skills, analytical skills, and subject-matter expertise.  You have to be cognizant of your own biases and viewpoints to make sure it is not getting in the way of the news story.  It is not an easy-to-find set of skills and knowledge.

Bona fide journalism does not require the skills of marketing, audience-building, tweeting, search-engine analysis, and blogging.  While these skills are important for ‘celebrity journalists’ and some other types of journalism, it is not the emphasis of bona fide journalism.  This interview with Alan Murray of The Wall Street Journal by the Nieman Journalism Lab provides some additional context of these skill sets.

IDEA 2 – CRITIQUE JOURNALISM

This style of journalism critiques the text, analysis, and opinions written or spoken by others, performing a fact-check to confirm, correct, and question the article.  It leverages the objectives and qualities of bona fide journalism, but starts with a news report by another person.

The result is a more factual news report and a call out (reprimand) of poor journalism if such is the case. Even an opinion piece that includes or implies facts should be confirmed.

I envision a website which contains the full text, marked up in red (with corrections, questions, call outs of faulty reasoning, unsupported assumptions) and blue (confirmation of facts).  Here is a conceptual mock-up.


I could also foresee this work done by a community of volunteers (paid or unpaid) with the appropriate skill sets of a bona fide journalist. Perhaps two bona fide critics critique an article independently associating the comments with the related text. A summary assessment is provided by each. A third bona fide critic--the lead critic--creates the final critique, leveraging the work by others.

All comments by all critics are stored and reviewable by a reader.  Picture a more user-friendly version of the Wikipedia history where you can view all edits to an entry.

Additional comments may be submitted by readers for a set number of days after publishing.  I recommend moderated comments because I believe unmoderated comments add less value and dilute the value of good responses.  These comments are reviewed by the three bona fide critics.  If one of the critics accepts the comment, it is displayed.

A question arises on which texts should be critiqued.  Obviously, not all news reports can be reviewed.  It should also not be biased against a certain writer, speaker, or news organization.  One approach may be a combination of popularity and randomness.  Leveraging current tools and technologies to determine the top news reports based on viewership and readership, a randomly selected subset of these should be pulled and placed in the hopper for critique.  Weighting should be given to articles of newsworthiness and importance to the public.

A database of these critiques can be used to provide a trustworthiness rating of several news organizations, journalists, and news sites.

IDEA 3 – TIME-LAPSED NEWS ARTICLE

This idea recommends there should one single news article on an evolving story.  As an event unfolds and as more facts become known, information should get better.  The original article should evolve and correct errors so that the most recent version of the news article is the most accurate and the most complete.

The history of the news article should be available so readers can see as time elapsed what new information became available and what information was corrected (e.g., there were 3 people shot, not 5 as originally reported).

The time-lapsed news report could be best done on-line, marrying concepts like the Microsoft Word track edit features, the Wiki history, and slidebar to jump to each snapshot of the article.  Print versions may be able to convey some of these concepts with bolded text for the latest information, endnotes with time-stamps, and corrections in-line.

There should be criteria when a news article is frozen.  It could potentially be based on time, the dearth of additional facts, the length of the article, and/or some other characteristic.  If another article on the same news story begins, it should reference and link to the first article as background information.

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These are my three ideas on journalism.  I hope to see these ideas improved and made a reality one day.

Happy journaling!
Documenting Your Memoirs with a Life ScrapbookIdeas for a New Genre of Journalism: Bona Fide Journalism ~ DANIEL SKLAR