Showing posts with label representation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label representation. Show all posts
Tuesday, 1 December 2015
Sunday, 15 November 2015
Tuesday, 3 November 2015
Thursday, 22 October 2015
Thursday, 15 October 2015
Year 9 - assessment
You have learned a lot this term about the following things:
You now need to demonstrate your knowledge of representation and apply this to the analysis of a short clip.
In your essay response you should write about:
Level 1:
- Representation of different groups of people
- Representation in the media
- Stereotypes and anti-stereotypes
- Analysing media texts
You now need to demonstrate your knowledge of representation and apply this to the analysis of a short clip.
In your essay response you should write about:
- How each character is represented
- What we learn about each character as a result
- Why you think the character is represented that way
- How this representation meets our expectations of stereotypes
- Any ways the representations don't meet the stereotypes
Level 1:
- Limited detail selected from the clip
- Unclear meaning in writing
- No terminology or theories applied
- At least one element of representation discussed
- Some general understanding of the concept of representation
- Some general understanding of which areas of representation are covered
- Little terminology or inaccurate terminology applied (theorists / media terminology)
- At least two elements of representation discussed
- Sound understanding of the concept of representation
- Sound understanding of which areas of representation are covered
- Some discussion of stereotyping and anti-stereotyping applied to clip
- Some terminology applied but inconsistent (theorists / media terminology)
- At least two elements of representation discussed in detail
- Clear and consistent understanding of the concept of representation
- Clear and consistent understanding of which areas of representation are covered
- Sustained discussion of stereotyping and anti-stereotyping applied to clip
- Consistently applies terminology accurately (theorists / media terminology)
Wednesday, 7 October 2015
Yr9 media - representation
Task 1:
Each group is to deliver your presentations on the different areas of representation to the rest of the class.
As each group is presenting, you should be taking notes using a Word.doc. which you should then save as research.
Task 2:
Once presentations are delivered, you should create a guide to all the different areas of representation - you can do this as a PPT, Word, Prezi, Animoto.
If you have any missing information from your classmates presentations, you must research it to make sure your guide is useful.
REMEMBER - this will be a tool you can use throughout your media studies course, as well as a handy revision tool for exams!
Task 3:
There are three areas of representation that you haven't covered - research these and add them to your representation guide.
Each group is to deliver your presentations on the different areas of representation to the rest of the class.
- Ethnicity
- Sexuality
- Gender
- Disability
- Age
As each group is presenting, you should be taking notes using a Word.doc. which you should then save as research.
Task 2:
Once presentations are delivered, you should create a guide to all the different areas of representation - you can do this as a PPT, Word, Prezi, Animoto.
If you have any missing information from your classmates presentations, you must research it to make sure your guide is useful.
REMEMBER - this will be a tool you can use throughout your media studies course, as well as a handy revision tool for exams!
Task 3:
There are three areas of representation that you haven't covered - research these and add them to your representation guide.
- Ability (physical and mental)
- Regional identity
- Class and status
- Key theorists
- Stereotypes and anti-stereotypes
- Examples in 'real' media
- Examples in 'fictional' media
Sunday, 4 October 2015
Yr10 - Hunger Games
Task 1:
Analyse the trailer to consider how teenagers are represented - consider the following individuals and groups:
- Katniss
- Gale
- Peeta
- Primrose
- Groups of teenagers
- Adults (consider binary opposition)
Write a short essay that discusses how each of these individuals and groups are represented through age:
- Provide specific examples from the trailer
- Compare teenage stereotypes to the relevant characters
- Suggest any anti-stereotypes
- Compare teenagers with the representation of the 'adults' in the trailer
Thursday, 1 October 2015
Year 9
Get into groups of no more than 4.
You have this lesson to research and prepare a presentation on one of the following topics:
Each person in your group is responsible for a different part of the research that will presented to the rest of the class:
Make sure you put a lot of effort into this as it will form the basis of your AND THE WHOLE CLASS understanding of representation in these different areas!
You have this lesson to research and prepare a presentation on one of the following topics:
- Ethnicity
- Sexuality
- Gender
- Disability
- Ability
- Class
- Age
- Regional identity
Each person in your group is responsible for a different part of the research that will presented to the rest of the class:
- Key theorists and what they have to say
- Stereotypes and anti-stereotypes
- Examples in 'real' media
- Examples in 'fake' media
Make sure you put a lot of effort into this as it will form the basis of your AND THE WHOLE CLASS understanding of representation in these different areas!
Monday, 28 September 2015
Hunger Games and The Amazing Spiderman Research
Research The Hunger Games and The Amazing Spiderman.
Then complete the following for BOTH films:
- An explanation of the film's plot
- The film's genre (who do you think would want to watch it? Teens, Adults, Males, Females, etc.)
- The film's rating (e.g, is it 15, 18, PG?)
- The film's budget (i.e. how much it cost to make)
- Who directed the film (is this film typical of their work?)
- Who starred in the film (are they major stars or relative unknowns? What films have the previously been in?)
- Which Studio(s) produced the film (and more importantly WHO owns them?)
- The technology involved (was it filmed on ‘film’ or digital, is it 3D? Does it use CGI?, etc.)
- Which studio(s) distributed the film (and once again who owns them?)
- The film's release date in the UK and the US
- FIVE different examples of how the film was marketed (e.g. posters, trailers, premiers, etc.)
Then complete the following for BOTH films:
- Make a list of character names.
- Write a character profile for each of the main characters (include an image of each one too) - age, family, background, interests, etc.
- Consider the ways that teenagers are represented in BOTH films (this will really help with your coursework essay).
Sunday, 20 September 2015
Yr10 Media - representation
Task 1:
Find an image of the following
- Tom Cruise in The Edge of Tomorrow
- Jennifer Lawrence in the Hunger Games
- Pharrell Williams in his Westwood hat
- Miley Cyrus in V Magazine Sep 2014
- Facial expression
- Styling (hair, makeup, clothes, costume, props)
- Mise en scene (background, lighting, colours, etc.). What does the location and setting tell us about them?
Task 2:
We need to consider how teenagers are represented in the media.
- Find a variety of images representing the typical teenager and create a mood board of them
- Find three news articles which involve teenagers
- Write a short discussion piece about what you think the key stereotypes that teenagers have to cope with, and whether you think this is fair.
- Also include a discussion of how easy it is to find positive or negative images, and what you think the reasons are for this.
Try to find examples of where teenagers are presented in a positive light in the media. Add this to the bottom of your work to balance your argument about teenage stereotyping.
Sunday, 6 September 2015
Monday, 20 April 2015
Monday, 13 April 2015
Yr10 media - film poster analysis
Movie posters are designed to attract and persuade potential audiences to purchase a ticket to the cinema to watch the film.
Task 1:
Work in pairs/threes and analyse the film poster you have been given using the question sheets. Create a presentation using Powerpoint or Prezi, and be prepared to share your ideas with the class. The best work will be displayed on this blog.
Questions:
- Does it contain standard poster features (picture, tagline, credit block, use of star names, use of star, release date, producer/director, enigma)?
- What are the main colours used? What do they connote?
- What symbols are used? Does the audience need foreknowledge to decode them?
- What are the main figures / objects / background? Are they represented photographically, graphically, or illustratively?
- Are the messages primarily visual, verbal, or both?
- Who is the intended audience?
- What genre conventions are there?
- Is a star used as a USP?
- Are 'expert witnesses' quoted?
- What pleasures (gratifications) are promised?
- How is attention gained (humour, shock, surprise, familiar face)?
- How does the tagline work (humour, pun, alliteration)?
- Is it a good poster?
- Does it communicate effectively with the audience?
- Are there any alternative readings which might harm the marketing message?
- Is it offensive?
Find your own film poster and use the questions above to analyse it. Produce a written piece of analysis, including a copy of the picture, in Word. Email your work to Miss Ghost.
Task 3:
Now look at your own poster designs. Swap with a peer and analyse each other's designs using the above questions - write your findings in your class book. Produce two constructive pieces of feedback for your peer to help them improve their work.
Task 4:
Continue working on and improving your film poster flat plan designs. Check with Miss Ghost if you're ready to begin designing your poster on the computer.
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