Wednesday, December 18, 2013

13E New and Digital Media: end of unit question

We have reached the end of our unit introducing New and Digital Media and looking at the internet. Using your notes and anything relevant from the NDM stories you have read and posted online answer the following question:

There are always concerns about new technology. In your view, what are the possible benefits and problems attached to the Internet? 

You must include the following:
  • An introduction
  • Both sides of the argument
  • At least three theorists or theories (e.g. Pareto's Law)
  • Your opinion
Feel free to discuss the question with the person next to you but you MUST answer on your blog and be prepared to discuss your response at the end of the lesson.

If your essay is not finished in the lesson (all four bullet points need to be covered), you must finish it for homework - due Tuesday 7 January.

AND a reminder of your ongoing homework - a New and Digital Media story every week leading up to your exam in June. This morning we've seen big news from the USA regarding the Edward Snowden case - a great example of contemporary debate concerning new and digital media.

Monday, December 16, 2013

Critical Investigation Task #6

Critical Investigation - First Draft

The following needs to be completed by...
  • Monday 6 January 2014
  • Complete the first draft of your Critical Investigation.

  • It must be a word processed 2,000 word essay (PLUS quotes - with a precise word count included at the end).

  • Also, include correctly set out references, quotes and footnotes. Footnotes should take the following form - Author Surname, Author First Name Initial (Year of Publication), Page Number(s). e.g...Lacey, N. (2009). p. 122. They should not appear all together at the end of the essay but at the foot of the page where they appear.

  • Where the next reference is from the same text and the same page use ibid. (in italics). This means 'in the same place' in Latin. If it's from the same text but a different page you include the new page reference too. e.g. ibid. p23.

  • full bibliography must be submitted. (See Critical Investigation Task #2 for help with this). Books should be listed in alphabetical order, by author's surname. If you're using the referencing system in Microsoft Word then all this will be done for you. Alternatively, you can use BibMe to help you do this correctly, using the APA format for books. e.g. Lacey, N. (2009). Image and Representation (2nd ed.). New York: Palgrave Macmillan. Here's a good example of a bibliography.

  • Two copies are necessary. Hand in a hard copy (on paper) 1.5 on the deadline day, and this needs to have one and a half line spacing. Also paste it up on your blog.
If you're in any doubt about what this all should look like then please check out some of the finished grade 'A' and 'B' essays from: (2013) (2012) (2011), (2010), (2009), (2008), (2007), (2006). But remember that those from 2009 and earlier were for a different specification and had to be 3,000 words, unlike yours (which should be 2,000).

They will be helpful, though, when thinking about how to write your essay (what to include in the introduction and conclusion, how to structure the work, how to set out quotes, the correct tone, and how much research to include - they each contain between 20 and 40 footnotes - you should aim for at least 30.)

But please ensure that all writing is done in your own wordsPlagiarism is a very serious business and anyone found simply copying from other sources (either students or books/websites) will be in serious trouble. And you will be found out if you do! We're not stupid - we know how you write, and we know very well what was in the previous studies (and there are numerous online checkers, er Google, that we can feed your work into to see if it has been plagiarised).

This is the big one so no excuses and good luck!

Critical Investigation Task #5

Up-to-the-minute additional web research


Although books carry more authority, the internet is an excellent resource and you should be searching regularly to identify additional ideas and references related to your Critical Investigation.

In particular, you will find up-to-the-minute, current information and opinion about your topic and this always scores highly with the examiners so it's important to continue online research all the way through until you hand in your final essay. A great example just this week: Beyonce releases a new album that bypasses traditional music promotion AND makes a point in the feminism debate - that fits many of our critical investigations and is just one story from the last week. Another crucial platform that you really ought to cover - New Media and Digital Technology - is constantly changing and you're already finding stories for that topic weekly for the exam too!

Remember, key places to keep track of this are...
  • A Level Media Studies subscription sites - we have paid for you to have free access to both the MediaMagazine (search the archive or browse through past copies), and MediaEdu (spend time, in particular, looking at the theory, new media and key concepts resources)...both are excellent and contain information pitched just right at your level of understanding. Passwords are here: MediaEdu and MediaMagazine
  • broadsheet newspaper sites, especially MediaGuardian (it's essential you get into the habit of reading this every week, preferably on a Monday), and the Independent Media;
  • media education sites - the biggest and best is MCS; but there's also Media Literacy, Film Education, Screen Online...
  • film review sites like IMDb (use the 'external reviews' link on the sidebar whenever you're on a chosen film) and Rotten Tomatoes;
  • film magazines online like Sight & Sound, GuardianFilm, Empire, and Senses of Cinema;
  • Wikipedia, naturally: a useful starting point for any web search, but make sure you avoid referencing this directly...it makes you look like a beginner. Provides, however, a good overview and, essentially, a list of 'References' and 'External Links' at the end of each entry;
  • the best student essays from 2012, from 2011, from 2010, from 2009, from 2008, and from 2007: in particular, look at their quotes (usually highlighted by a footnote number) and bibliographies (at the end of each essay) as they will have often identified some of the best quotes for your topic. But, as ever, be wary of the temptation to plagiarise - you should only 'borrow' a key quote from another person's essay if it's completely relevant and fully referenced! Remember: it is incredibly easy to tell when an essay takes a sentence or paragraph from another writer.
Over the holiday and into January, continue with your internet research, using the Google Search Tips you've been shown to help you refine your searches and, of course, the Google academic search engine: Google Scholar.

Task: Post up AT LEAST 20 additional quotes, with full article titles (and hyperlinked web addresses) and a brief explanation about each one saying how it's linked to your study. Due: January.

Exemplar Critical Investigations

Use these from 2013 to help you in terms of style/presentation/use of quotes/footnotes/bibliographies, etc.

Monday, December 09, 2013

13E: New and Digital Media

I hope you've got your new and digital media story ready to share for Tuesday's lesson - there is so much out there, this article about Trinity Mirror's new website Ampp3d being a good example.

Once we've gone around the class discussing our NDM articles, you need to answer the following questions on your blog to finish off Pareto's Law:

1) What is Pareto's Law? Sum it up in a paragraph.

2) What other industries or examples can you apply the 80/20 rule to?

3) List three arguments in FAVOUR of Pareto's Law applying to the internet:

4) List three arguments AGAINST Pareto's Law applying to the internet:

Finally, answer the following question:

5) Even if Pareto's Law applies to internet ownership, does it still apply to the content we read online?

If you don't get a chance to finish this in the lesson, complete for homework - due on Tuesday.

Wednesday, December 04, 2013

NDM - starter read for 13E

The New and Digital Media articles just keep on coming - here's a follow up to the Elan Gale hoax in today's Guardian (original hoax article here).

We'll be looking at Pareto's Law today but have a read of this article to get started.

Don't forget your weekly homework: a New and Digital Media story published each week.

Critical Investigation Task #4

Essay plan

Produce a detailed essay plan for your critical investigation, covering everything that you hope to include in your submission. Break your ideas and research down into sections and paragraphs with headings, summaries and a list of references that you hope to include at each step. You may also want to plan a rough word count for each section, remembering you are aiming for 2,000 words (not including quotes). You can see some decent ones from previous years by clicking on Sonam or Jaleesa from 2012.

Make sure that you label each point you hope to include by linking it to Key Concepts (MIGRAIN) and Wider Contexts (SHEP). (You could just include the initial letter in brackets). This way you can see whether you have covered everything that you need to in an even way. Also, ensure that you think about where you will include theories/theorists, issues/debates and media keywords. (Keep the 'Essential Word Dictionary' handy). You may find that the tasks we have completed recently help you to plan certain sections too.

This will make writing your essay MUCH easier. However, it is a big task as it requires you to read through all your research very carefully and plan what you should include and what isn't relevant. This is the key academic skill that universities teach - expect it to be difficult and take time! You could also browse through each other's blogs as there may be some overlapping areas of research you could share with each other.

You may want to produce this plan as a straightforward series of bullet points or as a more complex mindmap. If it's the latter you may have to do it by hand and then scan it in before posting it up on your blog. Or you may want to try out an online mind-mapping tool like bubbl.

Deadline: Friday 13 December

Note: You must get your essay plan approved by your teacher before Christmas so you are able to write the draft over the holidays.

Tuesday, December 03, 2013

13E Homework - Weekly New and Digital Media story

Your ongoing homework from now until your exam in June is to find a weekly New and Digital Media story online and post it to your MEST3 exam blog

We'll be starting lessons off by picking someone to present their story so it's vital you keep up-to-date. 

By the exam, you should have 25+ stories on the blog, each of which gives you a recent example to refer to in exam answers.

So, to recap: each week, you must find, read, summarise and comment upon AT LEAST one New and Digital Media story (A/B candidates will do more). The best sources to begin with are...


...but don't stick exclusively to these throughout the year. Find your own too.

For each story...

  • Provide the title and link;
  • Include an image or graphic;
  • Summarise the story in your own words;
  • Produce a list of bullet points of any key data/statistical information;
  • Comment on the story: What's your view? (At least one paragraph).

Remember: you could be presenting to class next week so NEED to keep up-to-date!

Monday, December 02, 2013

Critical Investigation Task #3

Historical text analysis and research

Research a historical text that you can use to compare with your contemporary one (that is the main focus of your investigation). By 'historical' we mean anything pre-2000 but the 40s, 50s, 60s, 70s or even 80s might be more fruitful because they pre-date many of the important changes that have occurred more recently (such as the gains for women as a result of feminism; or greater equality for ethnic minorities now that we are - arguably - a more inclusive and multi-cultural society; or the ground-breaking developments in new media/digital technology). The purpose here is to be able to demonstrate...

  • how society and the issue you are investigating has changed over the years and how these changes are reflected in different media texts, or - to put it another way...
  • how popular culture reflects the 'spirit of the age' or zeitgeist

Ideally, you will watch at least one film/TV programme/video game/music video from the past, make notes on it and research it in Media/Film Studies textbooks and on the internet. The best option is to watch/play the whole text on DVD/online or otherwise you might be able to see extracts on YouTube. Answer the following questions:

  • How is it similar/different to your main text?
  • How does this show how the genre/society/issue has changed?

Through this you will become aware of developments in the genre you are researching. This task is designed to make sure you have a range of texts to refer to in your critical investigation essay (you'll need at least five including your main text and the historical text you analyse in this task). Remember: you should be able to link them to the wider contexts that were/are present at the time. It's also worth noting that you will be rewarded for considering your topic across different platforms.

If you can't get hold of an original copy of the text it's not the end of the world - you will be stuck doing secondary research. Just make sure you do plenty of it and find out information from a few different sources.

As ever, list your historical text(s), research, textual analysis and links/bibliography in a detailed blog post (or simply add to your ongoing Notes and Quotes post).

Due: Thursday 5 December

Y13E Cover p5/6, Monday 2/12/12


Please stay in the classroom and get on with your Critical Investigations. Mr Babu will register/supervise you. 

You should have completed Task#1 (detailed analysis of two texts) for homework for today's lesson...

http://mediamacguffin13.blogspot.co.uk/2013/11/critical-investigation-task-1.html?m=1

...I'll be checking this tomorrow morning, p1. 

This week you need to complete Task#2 (additional reading/bibliography) which is due in a week, on Monday 9/12 p5...

http://mediamacguffin13.blogspot.co.uk/2013/11/critical-investigation-task-2.html?m=1

Y13D Cover p3/4, Monday 2/12/12

Stay in the classroom - Mr Babu will register/monitor you. 

Watch and make notes on 'The Virtual Revolution' Episode 2 (wear headphones when you do this)...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RFeJaEhUGs8&sns=em

After each ten minute section, type up your detailed notes on your blog, then watch/make notes on the next section. Do not leave it until the end of the entire programme to post up your notes. Please complete this for homework. 

You must also make sure you've done your Marxism/pluralism (audience power) essay. You need to hand in a paper copy and for it to be on your blog for your next Media lesson on Thursday. 

And don't forget this week's two NDM stories also need to be on your blog. 

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Critical Investigation: Task #2


Academic research and bibliography

As you know, a detailed bibliography is crucial to reach the top grades in your coursework. Refer to our Essential Reading List which contains titles of 45 of the most important books for the Critical Investigation, most of which are either in the school library or media suite. If you haven't used any of these yet, make sure you take advantage of these excellent resources this week.

Those underlined are the twenty most important but, obviously, not all of the texts on this list will be directly relevant for you...you'll need to spend a fair amount of time searching through them (especially the contents and indexes) to find the key quotes and ideas that will impress the examiners.

You must include references to quite a few of these books if you want an A or B so borrow them from the library, look at them in lesson or even buy them over the next fortnight. If the book belongs to the Media department, you will have to do your research in class or in DF06 during a free period - the books can't leave school unfortunately.

Task #2 is to pull this information together in an updated blog posting of all your notes and quotes so far INCLUDING a complete bibliography of your research so far. Make sure you include the following:

  • Author-Year-Title-Place-Publisher info;
  • Quotes (+ Page References) from the book that can be linked to your study;
  • A short explanation of each one explaining how it is relevant to you/your topic.
  • Finally, post up on your blog a Complete Bibliography (so far) to include ALL the books you currently have quotes from. It MUST contain at least TEN different academic books or journals as well as all your online and Media Magazine sources.
Most people find formatting a bibliography very difficult the first time - there are quite specific rules that you need to follow and universities are very fussy about how it is presented. Use this 'Guide to writing bibliographies' to help or try this really useful bibliography formatting and creation tool: 'BibMe'.

Deadline: Friday 6 December (13D); Monday 9 December (13E)

Hegemony in the age of New and Digital Media

Starter

I've got some reading to get you started. Firstly, I noticed a reference to hegemony yesterday in an article that could also be linked to our work on feminism - read this article on the Hunger Games and at least 15 comments below.

You might also want to look at this story on the front page of the Guardian website this morning... can we link this to hegemony?

Main task

Read the Media Magazine article ‘Web 2.0: Participation or Hegemony?’ (use the log-in details here) and complete the following tasks:

1) Research the Ian Tomlinson case. What would the traditional, hegemonic view of the police be in a case like this? How did new and digital media create a different story? What does the police officer's subsequent aquittal suggest about the power of new and digital media?

2) Do you agree that new and digital media challenges the traditional, dominant hegemonic views? Why?

3) What does the author argue regarding whether hegemony is being challenged by Web 2.0? 

4) Use the topic you researched (royal family, NHS, immigration etc.) to provide examples of how new and digital media is used to challenge traditional or hegemonic views.

Complete for homework - due Thursday 5 December.

Monday, November 25, 2013

Critical Investigation: Task #1

Before you know it, you'll be needing to write your Critical Investigation essay - which means we need to step up our preparations to make sure we have everything in place. We have designed a series of tasks to help you do this that you will need to complete over the next month. 

Final Deadline
All the preparatory tasks need to be finished before Christmas: Friday 20 December. You will then have the Christmas holidays to write the first draft of your 2,000 word essay.

TASK #1 TEXTUAL ANALYSIS
TASK #1 DEADLINE: FRIDAY 29 NOVEMBER

Carry out close textual analyses of at least TWO chosen scenes/extracts/clips from your PRIMARY text and post them up on your blog. 

The extracts should be able to exemplify some of the key points you wish to make in your Critical Investigation and link with some of the following key areas raised by your text...

Issues and 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 it is an extract you haven't analysed before and embed the YouTube link in your posting if you can.

Think of each analysis as like a MEST 3 exam analysis but with one text instead of two - so you need to cover MIGRAIN and SHEP and you are advised to watch the extract several times and to make detailed notes before embarking on the write-up, which should be in essay format (NOT in note form). 

Use our Key Concepts Glossary to help you think about terminology to use. You should be including as many of these keywords and ideas as possible in your analysis (where relevant...this won't always be the case). You should also include ideas from the essential Media Keywords A-Z - another fantastic resource you should be reading religiously.

Good luck!

Critical Investigations - more online resources

We have paid for subscriptions to two online sites that you can log in to and add to your Critical Investigation research. They are as follows:

Media Magazine
The online archive of the magazines we have been looking at. Details:

http://www.englishandmedia.co.uk/mm/index.html 

Click on the top left box 'Enter Subscribers Site'. Log in details:

Username: mediamagazine10
Password: ly957mp


Mediaedu
Another online resource that contains a large number of case studies and articles on key media issues.

http://media.edusites.co.uk/

Click on the top right box 'Login'

Username: greenford
P/W: greenfordedu



Jump Cut
Jump Cut is an online contemporary Media journal with an archive dating back 40 years. The current issue is available here and the archive can be found here.

It's definitely worth searching for academic articles on your chosen topic. Note, you don't need a log-in for Jump Cut, the material is available for free online.


If you have any problems logging in to the top two sites, let me know.

Good luck!


Mr Halsey

Monday, November 18, 2013

13E cover work - Mr Halsey

Sorry guys, I'm still on paternity leave but I plan to come back in on Thursday so we can pick everything up then.

For today, I want you to make sure you've finished last Thursday's work on hegemony - collecting articles, headlines, links, blogs, comments and more on one of the issues I suggested. The original blog post is here.

If you're still struggling to get your head around hegemony, this page on the excellent Media Know All site will hopefully help. It covers ideology, dominant readings and the hegemonic view of beauty in the western world - read it today.

On Thursday, we'll discuss some of these issues and also watch a brilliant example of hegemony in action - straight from BBC1.

See you then!

13D cover work - Mr Halsey

Sorry guys, I'm still on paternity leave but I plan to come back in on Thursday so I'll see you then.

For now, continue with your Critical Investigation research. Remember all the different sources you can be using:

  • Media Magazines
  • Academic books
  • Journal articles - use Google Scholar
  • Newspaper website articles - look at both sides of the political spectrum (e.g. The Guardian and The Telegraph)
  • Primary texts - you can be carrying out close textual analysis of key scenes from your primary text

There is also a huge amount of stuff out there on the web waiting for your discovery. One I found recently is Film Studies For Free - a collection of links to free open source journals and articles on anything to do with the film industry. It looks amazing but I haven't had a chance to look into it in detail yet. Try it today if you can.

I look forward to seeing you on Thursday and helping you get your Notes and Quotes document well over that 2,000 word mark.

Good luck!

Thursday, November 14, 2013

13D cover work - Critical Investigations

Year 13 - I'm sorry I won't be in but the good news is I am a father! Baby Samuel was born this morning and we're doing OK.

You need to continue your Critical Investigations and get your Notes and Quotes document up to 2,000 words. The deadline for that is next week.

You should have plenty of research to be working through - and don't forget textual analysis of your chosen media text too.

Good luck - we'll continue our tutorials when I return.

13E cover work - Hegemony

Year 13 - I'm sorry I won't be in but the good news is I am a father! Baby Samuel was born this morning and we're doing OK.

Ideally, I would be there to teach you more on hegemony because it's a difficult theory to understand at first. However, if you complete the following task you will be further on the way to getting to grips with Gramsci's ideas...

Your task is to research one aspect of British society and decide what the dominant or hegemonic view is.

This is the ‘normal’ or accepted view that we see across most of the media coverage.

Your job is to research one topic from the choice below and find out what type of media coverage it gets. Is it positive? Critical? Ridiculed? Respectful? Dismissive? Ignored? Celebrated? You need examples from newspaper websites and blogs  - you may find blogs and comments differ from the dominant viewpoint that is found in major newspapers. 

Choose one of the following:

  • The Royal Family
  • Education
  • The police and security services
  • The NHS
  • Politicians
  • The Armed Forces
  • Immigration
  • Young people/teenagers

Find articles/websites/blogs and make notes on what angle or perspective the source takes on the issue.

Here's an example for what we're looking for - this is for another British obsession, house prices:

House prices
  • The dominant or hegemonic view is that high house prices are good.
  • Lots of coverage – with high prices almost always presented as a good thing. Mostly positive stories.
  • Stories generally presented from perspective of people who already own homes rather than those hoping to buy them – a classic example of the angle favouring the wealthy or ruling class.
  • Very little reference to the fact that house prices and risky mortgages contributed to the major economic crash in 2008.
  • Little coverage of the impossibility of buying a house for young people.
  • However, columns, blogs and comments present different opinions that contradict the dominant or hegemonic view (often written by younger people) - have a look at this example in the Guardian
Good luck - we'll pick this up next week and discuss it further as a class.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Tue 12/11/13: 13E Cover Work p1

Stay in the classroom and carry out Critical Investigation academic research using Google Scholar. Include links, page references and quotes and post up at least TEN different relevant quotes on your blog.

Complete for homework, doing additional research using Google Advanced Search, so that your Notes & Quotes document exceeds 2000 words by Monday 18/11/13.

Monday, November 11, 2013

NDM: UsvsTh3m

1. Take the test...
How much are you hated by the Daily Mail?
...and post a screenshot of your result along with a link to the main site on your blog.

2. Read the article...
Daily Mail quiz powers UsvsTh3m towards 3m users
...and explain: Why this website is a good idea for newspapers in the digital age (one paragraph).

3. Skim through the homepage and suggest three ideas on your blog for UsvsTh3m features.

Thursday, November 07, 2013

13E Cultivation theory

Write a 300 word blogpost on the opening of Top Boy using your content analysis.

Refer to Gerbner’s cultivation theory and suggest what meanings, ideas and beliefs viewers might form in the opening 10 minutes.

Good luck!

Monday, November 04, 2013

13D - Notes and Quotes

Apologies - I'm out on an AQA GCSE Media course that I have to attend for this year's exam topic.

In this double lesson you need to continue your notes and quotes document/blog post and make sure you have a minimum of 1,000 words by the end of the lesson. A few of us were behind when we looked before half-term so we now need to make sure we are on top of things.

We can meet on Thursday during the lesson to make sure everything is up to date.

Good luck and keep the research going!

Monday, October 21, 2013

13E Cover Work: 21/10, p5/6

Make sure you register with Mr Babu/the cover teacher and that you stay in the classroom for the whole double period.

1. Ensure you've completed the homework task to produce your first 500 words of Notes/Quotes.

2. Continue with your Critical Investigation research. In particular, make use of the Media Magazines on the bookshelf. Your Notes/Quotes document must be at least 1000 words by p1 tomorrow's lesson (Tue 22/10: I WILL be there and I'll be checking in 1:1 tutorials). Please include a word count and make sure it is posted up on your blog.

13D Cover Work: 21/10, p3/4

Make sure you register with Mr Babu and that you stay in the classroom for the whole double period.

1. Complete the homework task if you haven't already done so.

2. Read this week's new/digital media stories on each other's blogs. Comment on at least THREE in their comments sections, stating your opinion on the topic. Paste the links to your comments in a posting on YOUR blog, entitled: "Comments on NDM blogs".

3. Read the article: Digital subscriptions to the Times and Sunday Times top 150,000 and the comments by readers in the section below it. Summarise the article on your blog and then select the FIVE comments that you agree with most and the FIVE that you disagree with most. Copy/paste them onto your blog saying why you agree/disagree.

4. Homework (for Thursday 24/10). Complete all of the above.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

13D HW: Web 2.0 Articles

From MediaMagazine...
(login first: username: mediamagazine10; password: ly957mp)
Read each article and summarise the key points in your own words on your blog and list the key information as bullet points.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Year 13 - Critical Investigation next steps

You should now have an in-depth, completed Critical Investigation Proposal on your blog. Before half-term, you will have a short tutorial confirming the subject matter, question and linked production is acceptable and focused on a text from the last five years.

The next step is to develop a 'Notes and Quotes' document to contain all your research. This document will eventually be thousands of words and contain all your links, ideas, comments and quotes from everything you read and watch. It is essential that you have a wide collection of research and notes before you write a single word of your actual essay.

Your homework over the next week is to start your Notes and Quotes document and reach at least 500 words. 

You can do this on Word or as a blogpost but you WILL have to publish everything you've got to your blog at least once a week for the next month.

Fortunately, you already have a template for this document from the last section of your Critical Investigation Proposal. Copy everything over under the heading Research Plan and start watching, reading and writing up any thoughts, ideas, quotes or comments you think of while looking at it. Don't forget to include anything you found in the Media Magazine articles too.

You'll need this on your blog by Tuesday 22 October - good luck!

Edward Said - Orientalism

We've had some very good discussions on Edward Said's Orientalism and the different representations of East and West. Your task to finish this topic is to answer two questions on the opening of Yasmin (2004). The clip is available on YouTube:


The questions you need to answer are difficult and there are no right or wrong answers. In fact, you could argue both sides depending on what part of the clip you choose. Please answer the following two questions in mini-essay format:

  1. Does the opening of Yasmin offer a positive or negative representation of British Muslims?
  2. To what extent does the opening of Yasmin reinforce or challenge Said’s theory of Orientalism – that the west is superior to the exotic or dangerous east?

Due: Monday 14 October

Tuesday, October 01, 2013

Mr Halsey cover work - Tuesday 1 October

Apologies for not being in today - I've picked up that cold going around and feel rough. I hate missing lessons but there's plenty for you to be getting on with...

13E - Representation
There is work on the blog (scroll down) to write a 300 word blog post on the Daily Mail article we read about the Olympics. Make sure you bring in the theorists Alvarado and Fanon from last lesson.

13D - Critical Investigation proposals
I'm sorry I won't be able to do any tutorials today but send me an email if you've got any questions and I'll get back to you this week. Everything is on the blog to work through and I'll catch up with you on Thursday.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

13E: Post-colonialism

As discussed in today's lesson, I'd like you to write a short analysis on your MEST3 exam blog of the representation of race and ethnicity in the two texts we studied today: the 2012 London Olympics Opening Ceremony and the subsequent opinion piece on the Daily Mail website. The links you need:

The Olympic Opening Ceremony on YouTube - from 101.30 (music section based around the surburban-style house).

The Daily Mail article you have a copy of but you may find this Guardian article on it useful.

Bring in the theorists we have learned about today and aim for 300 words.

Monday, September 23, 2013

Year 13 Critical Investigation Proposal

The next step in our Critical Investigations is to develop our presentations into detailed academic proposals. You will be given a one-to-one tutorial to help you find the right angle and issue to concentrate on but for now need to develop a blog post working through the following headings and tasks:

Working title

Include specific texts in the title and either 'how or 'why' or both, e.g.: To what extent and why are video games such as 'Call of Duty' and 'Grand Theft Auto’ becoming more violent?

Angle

E.g.: What impact are these increasingly violent games having on their audience? Is this simply a moral panic of the 21st century or is further regulation required?

Hypothesis

E.g.: Video games are psychologically damaging for young people, and audiences have become increasingly desensitised to screen violence.

Linked production piece

E.g.: Newsnight-style documentary video report looking at the impact of violent videogames on young people.

MIGRAIN

Apply the Key Concepts to your texts/topic by using the questions from the Summer Research Project to help you. (Include at least five bullet point/key concept). Include as many media keywords as you can.

SHEP

Apply the Wider Contexts to your text/topic, including at least three bullet points on each one.

Issues/Debates

Select at least five and say how each relates to your study, using the Media A-Z to help you think about this:

  • 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

Select at least five and say how each relates to your study, using keywords/specific theorists' names from the Media A-Z:

  • 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
  • Contemporary Media Landscape

Explain how your study fits into this.

Research plan (media texts, academic texts and websites)

Media texts
What your main focus will be, E.g.:
Call of Duty
Grand Theft Auto

Other media texts
(at least five related examples)

TV documentaries
Research videos online, e.g.:
BBC One - Panorama, Addicted to Games? http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00wlmj0

Academic texts/books
(a minimum of five, including author/full title/year, e.g.:)
Barrie Gunter: The effects of video games on children: the myth unmasked (1998)
James Newman: Playing with videogames (2008)
Nancy Signorielli: Violence in the media: a reference handbook (2005)
Peter Vorderer, and Bryant Jennings: Playing video games: motives, responses, and consequences (2006)

Internet Links
1. At least FIVE from Media Guardian or Guardian Culture or another newspaper website.
2. At least FIVE from university websites/academic papers online. Use Google Scholar as a starting point.
3. Any other relevant sites/articles - the more the better.

Use last year's archive of previous top-grade Critical Investigations to help you.

You have two weeks to complete this detailed proposal before you need to start your research in depth. Good luck!

The Rise and Rise of UGC

13D: Read this article...

The Rise and Rise of UGC

Answer the following questions...

  1. What is meant by the term ‘citizen journalist’?
  2. What was one of the first examples of news being generated by ‘ordinary people’?
  3. List some of the formats for participation that are now offered by news organisations.
  4. What is one of the main differences between professionally shot footage and that taken first-hand (UGC)?
  5. What is a gatekeeper?
  6. How has the role of a gatekeeper changed?
  7. What is one of the primary concerns held by journalists over the rise of UGC?

Thursday, September 19, 2013

13D homework: presentation feedback

Firstly, well done on producing some excellent presentations - the level of focus and long-term thinking in terms of your critical investigations was brilliant to see. There were also some EBIs (there always are!) and hopefully some of you have learned the importance of rehearsal when presenting. Remember: you may well have to do something similar at a job interview in future.

You now need to write up my feedback as a WWW and EBI list

Once you've done that, write a detailed evaluation of your presentation. Include the following:
  • How your research contributed (or failed to contribute) to the presentation
  • The delivery of the presentation
  • The topic area chosen
  • How you plan to develop the presentation into an extended academic essay
It is very important this is on your blog by Tuesday (24 Sept) - make sure it is done!

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Feminism: the end of men?

American author Hanna Rosin caused controversy last year when she published her book 'The End of Men'.

Read an interview with her in the Telegraph first and then...

...a response disagreeing with her in the Guardian

What is your opinion? Are women taking over? 

What will the world look like for men and women in 10 years? 50 years? 100 years?

Remember: the most important aspect of A2 Media is developing the confidence in your own opinions and thoughts.

Questions: answer these on your blog (finish for homework - due Tuesday)

1) To what extent do you agree with Rosin's hypothesis that women are taking over modern society? Give examples in your response.

2) Can we find examples in modern media that support Rosin's suggestion that women are taking charge? You may wish to argue the opposite - that men still dominate the media scene.

3) Research Judith Butler's approach to feminism. How might Butler respond to Rosin's writing in The End of Men?

Monday, September 16, 2013

13E Feminism: essential reading

Read the following articles and be prepared to discuss the questions below at the end of the lesson.

Guardian: Twitter boycott

Independent: Our generation needs to reclaim feminism

Telegraph blog: If you upset feminists, prepare for abuse

Guardian: Page 3's days may finally be numbered


  1. Was the Twitter boycott an appropriate response to the online threats prominent women were receiving?
  2. Should Twitter have done more in response to those threats?
  3. Should young women in 2013 take an interest in feminism? Do young women need to 'reclaim' feminism?
  4. Why has the internet been effective in feminist campaigns?
  5. What is your opinion on page 3 of the Sun still featuring a half-naked young woman in 2013?

Homework: Answer the five questions above in detail on your blog.

Due: next Tuesday.


Thursday, September 12, 2013

13D: Weekly NDM Story

13D: Each week (for Monday's double lesson) you must find, read, summarise and comment upon at least one New and Digital Media story (A/B candidates will do more). The best sources to begin with are...


...but don't stick exclusively to these throughout the year. Find your own too.

For each story...

  • Provide the title and link;
  • Include an image or graphic;
  • Summarise the story in your own words;
  • Produce a list of bullet points of any key data/statistical information;
  • Comment on the story: What's your view? (At least one paragraph).

You'll be presenting these to the class each week and, obviously, building up an archive of up-to-date examples to include in any exam answer.

13D NDM Essay Question #1

  • 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?
Plan/revise your answer for this question (using the PowerPoint from last term, and your own research) for a one hour timed essay on Mon 16/9.

Monday, September 09, 2013

Y12 New/Digital Media Lessons: Revision

13D: Go back through this PowerPoint for HW this week and revise it for your baseline assessment exam essay under timed conditions (1 hour)...

Y12 Introduction to New/Digital Media Lessons

Some key quotes/ideas (Briggs/Burke, Castells, Gutenberg/Internet Revolution, Keen, Pareto's Law...)

Do any of the activities you haven't already done and post them up on your Unit 3 blog.

Tuesday, July 02, 2013

Summer Research Project

For all Year 12 students (who'll be Year 13 in September '13)...

The following needs to be completed by the first lesson you come back at the start of September..
.

1. Choose a media text that you are interested in and that is less than five years old.

2. Spend several hours analysing the text – watching, reading, annotating, notetaking, re-watching, discussing with others (and considering the MIGRAIN questions below) etc. 

3. Research your text online.

4. Post up all evidence of research on your Unit 4 blog. You are looking for the following: reviews, newspaper/magazine articles, online comments or blogs linked to your text, useful book titles linked to your text, relevant theory, relevant media issues and debates, information about wider contexts, etc.

5. Don't just cut and paste mindlessly - be selective, try to summarise the information, comment on it and explain why it is useful. Also, make sure that you include specific links to all the sites you find.

6. Feel free to be as creative with your blogs as you can. Include pictures, clips, reflections, links etc.

7. Prepare a 5 minute, 20-slide 'Ignite' presentation on your text to be ready for the first week back. If you're unsure how these work, remind yourself by reading through the lesson slides: Introduction to the Critical Investigation, that has links to good Ignite examples and tips on how to present well.

8. Try to address each of the Key Concepts (MIGRAIN) in your presentation, and answer these questions on your blog...

Media Representations 

Who is being represented? 
  • In what way?

  • By whom?
Why is the subject being represented in this way? 
  • Is the representation fair and accurate?

  • What opportunities exist for self-representation by the subject?
Media Languages and Forms 
  • What are the denotative and connotative levels of meaning?

  • What is the significance of the text’s connotations?

  • What are the non-verbal structures of meaning in the text (e.g. gesture, facial expression, positional communication, clothing, props etc)?

  • What is the significance of mise-en-scene/sets/settings (CLAMPS)?

  • What work is being done by the sound track/commentary/language of the text?

  • What are the dominant images and iconography, and what is their relevance to the major themes of the text?

  • What sound and visual techniques are used to convey meaning (e.g. camera positioning, editing; the ways that images and sounds are combined to convey meaning)?
Narrative 
  • How is the narrative organised and structured?

  • How is the audience positioned in relation to the narrative?

  • How are characters delineated? What is their narrative function? How are heroes and villains created?

  • What techniques of identification and alienation are employed?

  • What is the role of such features as sound, music, iconography, genre, mise-en-scene, editing etc within the narrative?

  • What are the major themes of the narrative? What values/ideologies does it embody?
Genre 
  • To which genre does the text belong?

  • What are the major generic conventions within the text?

  • What are the major iconographic features of the text?

  • What are the major generic themes?

  • To what extent are the characters generically determined?

  • To what extent are the audience’s generic expectations of the text fulfilled or cheated by the text? Does the text conform to the characteristics of the genre, or does it treat them playfully or ironically?

  • Does the text feature a star, a director, a writer etc who is strongly associated with the genre? What meanings and associations do they have?
Media Institutions 
  • What is the institutional source of the text?

  • In what ways has the text been influenced or shaped by the institution which produced it?

  • Is the source a public service or commercial institution? What difference does this make to the text?

  • Who owns and controls the institution concerned and does this matter?

  • How has the text been distributed?
Media Values and Ideology 
  • What are the major values, ideologies and assumptions underpinning the text or naturalised within it?

  • What criteria have been used for selecting the content presented?
Media Audiences 
  • To whom is the text addressed? What is the target audience? (Demographics, Psychographics)

  • What assumptions about the audience’s characteristics are implicit within the text?

  • What assumptions about the audience are implicit in the text’s scheduling or positioning?

  • In what conditions is the audience likely to receive the text? Does this impact upon the formal characteristics of the text?

  • What do you know or can you assume about the likely size and constituency of the audience?

  • What are the probable and possible audience readings of the text? 
  • What are the audience pleasures, uses or gratifications (Refer to theory).
  • How do you, as an audience member, read and evaluate the text? To what extent is your reading and evaluation influenced by your age, gender, background etc?
Good luck. There is a lot to do here. Our advice is to work on this throughout the Summer rather than leaving it all to the last minute. It should be an enjoyable process - finding out about something that you're interested in. If you have any problems then please don't hesitate to email me.

And remember, the aim of this is to develop your key research skills that you'll be using when you do your coursework next year...and these are skills that are vital for any subject you do in Year 13 or at university.