Workshop Handouts
(http://www.wam.umd.edu/~toh/Handouts.html)
Here is a collection of handouts from various workshops and training presentations
given by Tom and Mary O'Haver.
Last updated October, 2005.
Improve Your Image: Introduction to Digital Imaging Technology
http://www.wam.umd.edu/~toh/image
http://home.swfla.rr.com/ohaver/ImageWorkshop/
Part 1: Basic Digital Photography Review of computer basics, choosing a digital camera, downloading pictures from your digital camera, organizing your photo files, printing your pictures, sending pictures via email, copying pictures to a CD-R disk, basic photo editing with Paint Shop Pro, correcting common photographic flaws, choosing and using a scanner, how to send photos on the Internet using Shutterfly.
Part 2: Advanced Digital Photography Review of basics, overview of tools in Paint Shop Pro, adding text labels, artistic and creative effects, creating a photo collage, how to make multi-layer images, automating repetitive actions, making your digital still images into video slide shows to watch on TV, using clip art, importing images into other applications, scanning cartoons and logos, color extraction, colorizing black and white photos.
Digital Sound and Music
http://www.wam.umd.edu/~toh/sound/
http://home.swfla.rr.com/ohaver/SoundandMusic/
Introduction to digital sound recording and playback. Digitizing sounds with a microphone and from a tape recorder. Use of sound processing software to edit, amplify, display sounds graphically, and change file formats. Downloading sounds from the internet. File formats and sound player programs for au, wav, aiff, and mp3 files. Playing sounds in Web pages, slide shows, and Powerpoint presentations. constructing an audible alphabet book.
Copying songs to your hard disk from your audio CDs. Recording (burning) custom audio CDs from sounds and music files on your hard disk. Converting audio tapes and vinyl records to audio CDs. Reducing noise in old recordings. Making slideshows with backgrouond music. MIDI: downloading, arranging, and playing MIDI songs. Computer Karaoke.
Using Templates to Produce Web-Publishable Multimedia Projects
http://www.wam.umd.edu/~toh/templates
A simple approach to creating multimedia projects for publication on the Web; incorporate prepared graphics, images, and recorded sounds into Web pages; organize class-based Web projects related to a curriculum topic in which each student in the class contributes the content (writing and artwork) for one page. Includes ready-to-use templates for Slide Show, Alphabet book, class project, and thumbnail index class project.
Locating and Evaluating Information on the Internet
http://www.wam.umd.edu/~toh/search/
Survey of methods for locating and evaluating information on the Internet: What if I get too many hits? What if I get too few hits? What determines the order in which the hits are listed? What to do with the links that you find?
Computer-based Manipulatives
http://www.inform.umd.edu/MCTP/Courses/CBM/
Overview of freeware, shareware, demos and Web sites that support open-
ended, discovery-oriented, creative, constructive
experiences, with the emphasis on science and math. January 5, 2001
"When Dragons eat the Sun"
http://www.inform.umd.edu/MCTP/Courses/AstroLesson/
A technology-enhanced discovery lesson on the stars, planets, moon and sun as seen from
Earth. Middle-school level. Uses the shareware planetarium simulator program CyberSky
as well as several Web sites. Print out and duplicate this Student Worksheet for your
students to record their observations and answers. January 5, 2001
"In Living Color"
http://www.inform.umd.edu/MCTP/Courses/ColorLesson/
A technology-enhanced discovery lesson on the science and mathematics
of color. Middle-school level. Uses the freeware color selection program RGBtoHEX
from No-Nonsense Software.
Print out and duplicate this Student Worksheet for your
students to record their observations and answers. January 5, 2001
Simulations and Computer Models in the Classroom
http://www.wam.umd.edu/~toh/simulations.html
Presented at the Fulbright Teacher Exchange Orientation Program,
Catholic University of America, Washington, DC,
July, 2000.
Digital Image Literacy
http://www.inform.umd.edu/MCTP/Technology/image/image.html
Questions
and answers about digital imaging and photography: scanners,
digital cameras, resolution, troubleshooting, image manipulation software.
Putting Kid Pix SlideShows on the Web
http://www.wam.umd.edu/~toh/slideshow/
How to convert a KidPix SlideShow created on a Macintosh into HTML format for
publication on the Web. Using this method, each slide is shown full-size on a separate page, along with navigation
buttons for moving between the slides and a sound button for playing the accompanying recorded sound. No Knowledge of HTML is required.
Better Graphics for Multimedia and the World Wide Web
http://www.inform.umd.edu/MCTP/Technology/image/
How to improve the look and reduce the file size of digital photographs and
computer graphics. Illustrated with lots of graphic examples.
Making a Web Project with the Class Projects Templates (2001)
http://www.inform.umd.edu/MCTP/Technology/handouts/MultiPage.html
The class project template is a set of files that serve as a template to
facilitate the construction of a Web site for displaying a project created
by a class of students. It consists of a chain of 25 "student" pages (each
with a picture and a paragraph of text), an index (table of contents) that
links to each student page, a title page (with a graphic), and a set on
ancillary pages (a Bibliography page, a Related Sites page, and a
"How we did it" page). The template contains all the "HTML" coding needed,
including links between pages and navigation arrow icons.
Reference Table of HTML Tags
http://www.inform.umd.edu/MCTP/Technology/handouts/card.html
A two-page table of all the essential HTML (Hyper-Text Markup Language) tags, with
templates that you can Copy and Paste into your own HTML pages.
An Introductory HTML Tutorial
http://www.inform.umd.edu/MCTP/Technology/handouts/html.html
A tutorial on HTML (Hyper-Text Markup Language), with working examples. Explains
how to create your own Web pages from scratch. Includes text formatting, graphics,
hyperlinks, sound, lists, and tables, etc.
How to Make a Web Page 
http://www.wam.umd.edu/~toh/HowToMakeAWebPage.html
A step-by-step procedure for creating you own Web page with text, pictures,
and digitized sound bites. Includes templates to simplify construction.
Classroom Multimedia Production (1995)
http://www.wam.umd.edu/~toh/Multimedia.html
A step-by-step procedure for producing multimedia Macintosh Hypercard stacks
containing text, color pictures, and digitized sound. Covers capturing still video images
with VideoSpigot and Macintosh AV digitizers, adding text, and digitizing sound bites.
Based on a set of Hypercard templates that are separately available.
Viewing, Compressing, and Processing Images with Graphic Converter
http://www.wam.umd.edu/~toh/GraphicConverter.html
Graphic Converter is an excellent Macintosh $35 shareware program for performing a number of useful manipulations
on digitized images, such as converting between different file formats,
compressing, resizing, adjusting color, contrast, and brightness, sharpening,
and otherwise touching up scanned images and other bitmap graphics.
This page is maintained by Prof. Tom O'Haver , Professor Emeritus, The University of Maryland at College Park.
Comments, suggestions and questions should be directed to
Prof. O'Haver at toh@umd.edu.