Classroom Teacher

Using Picassa and Face Recognition Software to Organize Your Classroom Photos

Nobody does it like Google.

If you’re like most teachers, you have access to a digital camera. Maybe it’s your own personal digital camera from home, or maybe it’s the school camera, but chances are you’re snapping photos of your students and filling up your hard drive.

Maybe you’re putting together a year-end slideshow and you want to make sure that you include photos of as many students as you can. Maybe you’re a primary school teacher and you’re putting together a special album for students to take home to celebrate their year at school. Maybe you’re putting together the yearbook.

No matter what the project is, chances are you’ve spent too much time flipping through your photo collection trying to find photos of specific students.

In this digital age, it’s easy to have thousands of photos on your hard drive. In fact, if you combine all of the photos from all the teachers at your school, you might even have tens of thousands of photos on the network. So how can you quickly go through your photos and find the one that you’re looking for?

Enter Picassa.

There’s lots of great Digital Asset Management (DAM) and photo organization software out there. In fact, lots of them include face recognition software, but the neat thing about Picassa is that it tags your photos automatically.

What does this mean? Download the Picassa software onto your computer. Tell it where your photos are and it will added to its database. Click on the people tab and it will automatically start to go through your photos and find the people in your photograph. Click on a face, had a name, and now every time Picassa finds that face it will automatically take that photo with that person’s name.

To put this in comparison, Windows Live Photo Gallery also has a face recognition feature. The difference is that Windows Live Photo Gallery will find all the faces in your photos, but you have to manually go through each and every single photo to tag it with the correct name.

Picassa on the other hand, does this automatically. For example, if you tell Picassa that this face belongs to Sophia, then when you click on the Sophia people tag, it will show all of the photos that you have manually tagged as Sophia, as well as any photos that Picassa thinks is Sophia.

To make your life easier, you can toggle the display so that it only shows the photos that Picassa thinks is Sophia and then you can click yes or no for each photo to confirm that it really is Sophia. There is also a confirm all button. If Picassa got them all right.

Picassa is by no means perfect, and it certainly won’t find all of the photos with Sophia in it, but the fact that it automates the face recognition process is a huge timesaver.

So, where do we go from here? How do I use Picassa in the classroom?

  1. Download Picassa.
  2. Tell Picassa where your photos are located on your computer, or let it discover them automatically by searching just your “my documents” folder, or have it search the entire computer.
  3. Tag your class photos with your students’ names.
  4. As the school year goes on, when you attach your camera to your computer or stick in your camera’s memory card, let Picassa import the photos and tag your students automatically.

At the end of the year, when you’re making your slideshow, just click the people tag and you can pull up all of the photos that have Sophia in them.

Things we like about Picassa

Things we don’t like about Picassa

How do you manage your class photos?

(This post was written using Dragon NaturallySpeaking 11 with a 95.6% accuracy rate. There are 1327 words in this document. There were 58 dictation errors: 48 word errors, and 10 punctuation errors)

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