The following is from a
May 2008 email newsletter to NCTE members.
Go to
www.ncte.org to locate these resources.
Using Movies in the Classroom
George Lucas was born this month, and that makes it a great time to think
about how we can use films in the classroom, whether we analyze and explore
existing videos or we ask students to step behind the camera and take on the
filmmaker's role. This week's Ideas provide some resources that suggest new and
interesting ways to explore film with students.
The Language Arts article "Let's
Go to the Movies: Rethinking the Role of Film in the Elementary Classroom"
(E) argues that elementary language arts teachers should expand their definition
of "text" to include film, a valuable instructional material. The article notes
that today's elementary students come to class with a great deal of knowledge
about films -- prior experiences which teachers can tap into -- and discusses
the application to film of reader-response theories.
Ask students to play the role of moviemakers with techniques from the Voices
from the Middle article "Meeting
Readers: Using Visual Literacy Narratives in the Classroom" (M). The article
describes a literacy narrative project -- a short, concise, digital video in
which students meld still images, motion, print text, and soundtrack in
communicating ideas/insights/discoveries about who they are as readers and
writers.
The English Journal article "Literature
into Film (and Back Again): Another Look at an Old Dog" (S) shows how to
help students move beyond basic comparisons as students learn to analyze the
techniques and changes film directors choose when translating literature to the
screen. The article provides a variety of literature, film scenes, and classroom
activities to introduce literary, cinematic, and theatrical elements.
Three related creative writing activities are available at EJ on the
Web.
Research has shown that contemporary popular films are a valuable resource in
the ESL classroom, but what about older films? The Teaching English in the
Two-Year College article "Unspoken
Content: Silent Film in the ESL Classroom" (C) explores how often overlooked
silent films can facilitate the development of ESL students' critical thinking
and writing skills.
The English Education article "English
Teacher Learning for New Times: Digital Video Composing as Multimodal Literacy
Practice" (TE) demonstrates how video composing helps provide support for
the new kinds of embodied multimodal learning teachers need in order to be
prepared for teaching students in 21st century classrooms.