In your exam lessons, you will be focusing on Identities and the Media – the second MEST3 exam topic. This will explore representations of youth, post-colonial theory (largely the post-war representation of non-white people in Britain), Feminism and gender representation and constructing our own identities in the digital age. Before Easter, you’ll be returning to your New and Digital Media exam topic and researching your own independent case study on a media industry of your choice. Here, you’ll be applying everything you learned in the Autumn to a new industry, exploring the impact new and digital media has had on institutions and audiences in that field.
In terms of coursework, this is the term when you will develop a final draft of your Critical Investigation as well as planning, writing, shooting and editing your linked production. There’s a lot of work to do and the time will fly by so make sure you’re organised, committed and as creative as you can be.
What can you do to maximise your grade in A2 Media Studies?
Now is the time to really step up your consumption of wider issues and debates in the media. If you want an A/A* grade, you need to be doing the following as a minimum:
- Not only completing the minimum homework of two new/digital media stories but really finding excellent articles on the future of news and journalism from across the web. Make yourself an expert on the impact of new and digital technology on media industries.
- This will mean keeping up with the Media Guardian to find out the big stories in the media each week – particularly on a Monday. Look beyond digital media – you should have opinions on politics, economics, media ownership, censorship, data mining and online privacy.
- Reading each issue of Media Magazine. Our archive is available here – the latest issue (MM62) has excellent features on Moonlight, virtual reality, Dunkirk, Love Island and the Handmaid's Tale - all excellent, relevant articles. Indeed, there may well be features that are useful for your critical investigation second drafts as well as exam preparation.
- Using our excellent archive of Media Factsheets on the M: drive Media Shared (M:\Resources\A Level\Media Factsheets) to revise and increase your knowledge of wider media issues and debates. There are over 100 topics covered, many of them highly relevant to our exam preparation (particularly media theory and debates) and critical investigations.
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