
The 2009 SCCTE Conference theme was “Images,
Imagination, Innovation.”
I was pleased to have been invited by the SCCTE conference
planners to present a half-day
post-conference
workshop Saturday January 31 on using film in the literature classroom.
My
aim was to help
English teachers (and their students) better appreciate the "languages of film."
Most of our students view movies (and other media) uncritically: they only know
what
they see on the screen. They don't have a clue how it got to the screen: the
process.
Teaching film literacy, or film fluency, is a way of "pulling back the curtain"
on how
movies are made. So helping them to understand the languages of film is a
perfect way
to encourage both critical thinking and critical viewing.
At the start of the presentation, we shared our favorite films and what made the film, or
the scene from the film,
memorable. The films, and techniques, were posted on the walls.
I referenced the upcoming Academy Awards (February 22) and asked participants to
brainstorm the award categories. Those categories and awards recognize the
people who use
and understand the "languages of film."
To get teachers accustomed to viewing a film critically, I started with this activity.
We started with a (passive) viewing of the opening scene from Steven
Spielberg's "ET-The Extra Terrestrial."
You can find this clip here.
(We viewed up to the point where the "mother ship" departs---
stranding ET on Earth.) After this initial viewing, I distributed
index
cards to groups of teachers.
Each card listed a different "language of film." The card was
read by each teacher in the group.
We watched the clip a second
time, incorporating
active viewing--with teachers concentrating on
their specific assignment, listed
on the card.
At the end of the activity, participants compared notes
and then a
representative from each
group shared what they saw/heard with the entire room.
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We looked closely at
opening credits, symbolism, point-of-view, and
lighting in several clips from "To Kill A Mockingbird;"
the role of music in "Tuck Everlasting;" the use of images, sounds and symbols
in "The Great Gatsby;"
and visualizing and storyboarding in "Because of Winn-Dixie."
Handouts from this workshop:
Frank Baker's Media Literacy Clearinghouse homepage
Frank Baker's Web Site Motion Picture/Film
Resources
Linking film to national and state teaching standards
National Film Study Standards for Middle School (The
Story of Movies)
Film Glossary
Frank Baker's Web Site/Film Study Guide "To Kill A
Mockingbird"
TKAM Symbolism Activity
Discovery United Streaming video "Images, Sounds & Symbols" (from The Great
Gatsby)
The Nuts & Bolts of a Screenplay (Writing Magazine, Feb/Mar 2007)
Page 1 from the screenplay "To Kill A Mockingbird"
Blank Storyboard Form
Media Smart DVD series (McDougal-Littell) includes film clips for analysis
Focus questions to help students read/write about films more effectively
Page promoting Summer Media Literacy Conference:
Bridging Literacies
Recommended books on film for school library media centers
Subscription form to
Australian SCREEN EDUCATION magazine
Read what participating teachers said
about this workshop.
Consider inviting Frank Baker to your school or district's next in-service
professional development opportunity. For more info, contact him here:
Frank Baker
return to the Media Literacy Clearinghouse homepage