The Poll closed yesterday after 10 days. I want to thank you all for your input, both in the vote and with individual comments. Both have been useful but each of the comments warrants a discussion at length. I'm sure it has all been done.
FWIW, in my Intro to Digital classes, we develop manual exposure skills, including DoF, bracketing, color balance, histograms and integrate them with Lightroom and its developing capabilities. (BTW lets stop using the word "post" or "post-processing". It is really developing).You have to remember I come from the "do it all in camera" school of photography. By about mid-semester I ask them if they would like their cell phones back or want a button to press for a special effect. They just laugh.
Now that this is done I can tell you that this poll will be a part of a discussion I will have with our Dean who, in his day, was the family photographer and darkroom resource. He thinks that the film modality is essential for training vocational photographers, and has pedagological (teaching/learning method) advantages. It is remarkable that administrators, and the average joe, only understand photography as the culture has represented it; the "magic" of the darkroom. Well, a combination of darkroom rats, photo wanna-bees, serious amateurs, posers, gods, goddesses, and pros said, 32-1, that Digital was vocational. BTW our Technical Advisory Board and faculty voted 16-2 to make film an elective an not have it in the degree.
The majority of commercial pros do not rely on "magic" or gimicky Lomography films to satisfy clients. Statistically that is a rare event. We leave that to others to play with. Work can be done there, even really cool stuff, but I wouldn't bet my house that it will lead to a livelihood. It's a one-trick pony that will fall to the wayside like smearing polaroids, oblique depth of field, reverse processing....oy-vey, just shoot me now.
Thank you, again.