Monday, May 07, 2012

Revision Checklist


Use this checklist to organise your Media revision: there is more than enough here to help you get a top grade...

Mainly for Section A
Mainly for Section B
...start working on this NOW and put together a revision plan to cover it all before the exam on Friday June 15th.

New/Digital Media (inc. News Case Study): New Articles

Keep checking back here every few days as there will be links added to new relevant articles, usually from MediaGuardian, that you can use for your MEST3 case studies.

Remember, the examiner wants to see fresh information that demonstrates someone who's actively taking an interest in the media so read/make notes on at least one new article/day...

Times and Sunday Times websites bring down paywall for jubilee weekend: Sunday Times app opened for free trial during culmination of a three-week editorial and marketing campaign.

Digital music spending greater than sales of CDs and records for first time: BPI reveals that digital music accounted for 55.5% of total £155.8m music sales in the first quarter of 2012.

Twitter now has 10m users in UK: UK is the fourth-largest country for Twitter users in the world, with 80% accessing it with mobile phones.

How Facebook became the world's biggest social network -animation: Facebook is hitting the stock exchange with its IPO later this week - and the latest estimates increase its potential valuation, making it the biggest floatation ever. But how did the social network get so big - and can it possibly get any bigger?

Life is tweet, says John Prescott, as Twitter reaches 10m milestone in UK: Twitter has helped shift the balance of media power from press barons to the people.

Leveson inquiry: the musical – video: An auto-tuned hip-hop extravaganza starring Lord Justice Leveson, Rupert Murdoch, Alastair Campbell, Charlotte Church, Hugh Grant, Kelvin MacKenzie, Piers Morgan, Robert Jay, Sienna Miller and many more.

Rebekah Brooks charged with perverting the course of justice: Former News International chief executive, her husband and four others charged in phone-hacking inquiry.

Best Critical Investigations 2012


Here are the very best Critical Investigations from this year - all worthy grade A essays. Well done for producing excellent work!

They contain a wealth of research that is directly relevant for the MEST 3 exam,   particularly on Representation.

Try to read/make notes on as many as possible in preparation, at the very least identifying a few quotes/ideas from each one that you think could be useful...






Theory Quotes


Here is a list of some of some useful quotations that will really impress the examiners if you can incorporate them...


They will also help to clarify some key Media Studies concepts...

hegemony, Marxism, cultural imperialism, globalisation, liberal pluralism, web 2.0

You should try to memorise a few (or simply a phrase or two from them), thinking about how you could include at least one of them in each of the Section B essay questions (although they are just as useful for Section A too).

Media A-Z Glossary


Make sure you keep reading this during your revision, using it to look up straightforward meanings of any theories/theorists/keywords you need to be clear about.

The more media terminology you include in the exam (all the terms covered in this book) the more marks you will get, so keep testing/re-testing yourself on what's in here...


And here is a checklist of the media Issues/Debates and Theories that the specification says you need to know (the AQA textbook has more detailed explanations/examples of all of these)...

Issues/Debates
  • Representation and stereotyping
  • Media effects
  • Reality TV
  • News Values
  • Moral Panics
  • Post 9/11 and the media
  • Ownership and control
  • Regulation and censorship
  • Media technology and the digital revolution – changing technologies in the 21st century
  • The effect of globalisation on the media

Theories
  • Semiotics
  • Structuralism and post-structuralism
  • Postmodernism and its critiques
  • Gender and ethnicity
  • Marxism and hegemony
  • Liberal Pluralism
  • Colonialism and Post-colonialism
  • Audience theories
  • Genre theories
...make sure you have some keywords/theorists for each one that you can apply to whichever texts appear in Section A, or in response to typical Section B questions.

Theories, Issues & Debates Summaries

Easy to revise from - some of the key ideas/theorists you need to know...

Revision Express Textbook


This is a fantastic resource! Really concise.

You are advised to learn all the key terms (in bold) and have a go at the exam questions at the end of each section (these are good for practice although NOT the typical ones you'll get in the exam; see the list of Section B questions for that).

This download covers most of the key issues & debates that you MUST be able to apply to the Section A texts you have to analyse/compare in the exam...

Advertising, Advertising & Marketing, Audience Profiling, Cult of the Celebrity, Effects Theory, Globalisation, Marxism, Media Ownership, Narrative Theory, News Values, Pluralism, Postmodernism, Reception Theory, Uses & Gratifications

AQA Official Textbook


Read and make notes/mindmaps on this essential text book, written by the exam board - great for revising...

MEST3 Section B Questions


A big part of your revision will be going back over your Case Studies for New/Digital Media and Representation.

Make sure you refine your researchadding to it over the final few weeks with up-to-the-minute info from sources like MediaGuardian, and new articles that will be posted up here.

Also, use the following advice/suggestions so you know precisely what kind of information you need to have researched (you should try to combine several of the topics listed to make sure you've covered a wide enough range)...


You should be able to answer all the typical questions for Section B in the exam...

New/Digital Media
  • “Digital media have, in many ways, changed how we consume media products.” Who do you think benefits most – audiences or producers?
  • “Media institutions are right to feel threatened by new/digital media.” Consider this statement and show how media institutions are reacting to technological developments.
  • The development of new/digital media means the audience is more powerful in terms of consumption and production. Discuss the arguments for and against this view.
  • “The new generation of UK media power players are going stratight to their audience via the web” www.mediaguardian.co.uk Monday July 14 2008. How have media institutions responded to the opportunities offered by new/digital media?
  • Developments in new/digital media mean that audiences can now have access to a greater variety of views and values. To what extent are audiences empowered by these developments?
  • Why and with what success are traditional media institutions adapting to the challenge posed by new/digital media?
  • The world first heard about the death of Michael Jackson from the online gossip website TMZ. How has new/digital media changed the ways in which information reaches audiences and what are the implications?
  • ‘New and digital media erodes the dividing line between reporters and reported, between active producers and passive audiences: people are enabled to speak for themselves.’ (www.indymedia.org.uk) Have such developments made the media more democratic, with more equal participation by more people?
  • New and digital media offers media institutions different ways of reaching audiences. Consider how and why media institutions are using these techniques. 
  • ‘To connect, to create, to share creativity or thought, to discuss, to collaborate, to form groups or to combine with others in mutual interests or passions.  If you can’t see the point of any of those things, you will not see the point of Facebook.’ (www.guardian.co.uk) What opportunities and/or disadvantages do new and digital media have for audiences?
  • Although new and digital media may promise audiences more freedom, it does not necessarily give them more power. Discuss.
  • New and digital media is creating one global culture. Do you think that this is true?
Representation
  • Critics have accused the mainstream media of tokenism and stereotyping by creating extreme and exaggerated representations. To what extent is this true for the group or place you have studied?
  • Media representations rarely challenge the dominant values of society nor do they give a voice to those with little power. To what extent is this true for the group or place you have studied? Why?
  • It has been said that media representations often reflect the social and political concerns of the age in which they are created. Discuss.
  • Media representations favour those with power at the expense of those without. To what extent do you think this statement is true?
  • 1Xtra, MTV Base and Zee TV are all hugely popular. But whenever I watch these channels, all I see is a ghetto… Nobody wants to be in the ghetto, OK? We all want to live in the mainstream.” (Lenny Henry in a speech to the Royal Television Society, Guardian News and Media Ltd, 2008)
  • Why would the group or place you have studied want to be represented in the mainstream media?
  • A dominant representation is one which is repeated across the media over time and so are the values that it carries. Discuss.
  •  ‘Constant media stories about gang crime create a depressing and unbalanced picture of  black youngsters.’  (www.guardian.co.uk) Using the group or place you have studied, consider whether media portrayals are more complex than simple positive or negative representations.
  • How does the representation of the group or place you have studied differ across different media platforms or genres?  Why do you think this is the case? 
  • A negative representation is better than no representation at all. Discuss this statement with reference to the group or place you have studied.
  • Part of stereotyping is the attitude that all members of a particular group are the same, or else fall into a very small number of types. How and why is the group or place you have studied stereotyped? 
  • Audiences are now too sophisticated to be taken in by negative and stereotypical representations. Do you agree?
  • How are stereotypes used by media producers and why are they so popular?
You should have detailed plans for each of these essays and have practised as many as possible under timed conditions (ONE HOUR for each).

Remember, the examiner is looking for the following:
  • A sophisticated and detailed evaluation, showing very good critical autonomy.
  • Sophisticated and detailed application of a wide range of wider contexts.
  • Supports answer with a wide range of examples from other media.
  • Articulate and engaged.




New Media: Essential Revision Articles


You MUST ensure you've read ALL of the following, making revision notes/mindmaps and understanding how you can apply the key points to the Section B essay questions:

From MediaEdu...

From MediaMagazine...

Others...

(Where prompted, use the login details you've been given to access the sites; email Macguffin if unsure).

New & Digital Media Lessons

Use this to help you revise, by going through each slide/linked article and making notes/mindmaps...

Wednesday, May 02, 2012

Y13 Tasks wc 30/4

All of the following needs to be completed by these deadlines:


13B: Fri 04/05 p3/4
13C: Tue 08/05 p3/4
  1. In the age of media 2.0 - six questions about media and participation (pp6-11)
  2. Participation debates - media and democracy (pp12-13)
  3. Social networking and citizen journalism - participating in the Arab Spring (pp14-19)
  4. Web 2.0 - participation or hegemony? (pp 58-62)
(I will email you the passwords).