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A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

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A useful guide from the Chief Examiner. June 2010 - Paper. Q1a) Describe the ways in which your production work was informed by research into real media texts and how your ability to use such research for production developed over time . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

Page 2: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

June 2010 - Paper

• Q1a) Describe the ways in which your production work was informed by research into real media texts and how your ability to use such research for production developed over time.

• 1b) Analyze one of your media productions in relation to genre

Page 3: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

Examiner’s Top Tips – 1a)

1. Plan and prepare – it can only be a combination of two of five things. Some combinations are more likely: digital technology and anything, creativity and anything.

2. Ensure you range across all your work.3. In advance, identify examples from your work

which you can talk about for each skills area. (you could adapt the same example for different skills areas)

Page 4: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

Examiner’s Top Tips – 1b)

• 10marks – argument, points• 10marks – specific examples from coursework• 5marks – terminology

• How will you revise to make sure you can cover each area?

Page 5: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

Find Five – Skills Areas

• Digital technology• Creativity• Research and planning• Post-production (evaluations)• Using conventions from real media texts.

Page 6: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

Give two examples to show your progress in…

Digital techology

Page 7: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

Give two examples to show your progress in…

Research and planning

Page 8: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

Give two examples to show your progress in…

creativity

Page 9: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

Give two examples to show your progress in…

Using conventions from real media texts

Page 10: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

Examiner’s Tips 1b)

1. Genre2. Narrative3. Representation4. Audience5. Media language

Page 11: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

Which theories and examples would you use for…

Media Language

Page 12: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

Which theories and examples would you use for…

audience

Page 13: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

Which theories and examples would you use for…

genre

Page 14: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

Which theories and examples would you use for…

representation

Page 15: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

June 2011 – Last Year’s Paper

1a) Describe the ways your production work was informed by research into real media texts and how your ability to use such research developed over time.

b) Analyze one of your productions in terms of genre

Page 16: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

January 2010

1a) Describe how you developed research and planning skills for media production and evaluate how these skills contributed to creative decision making. Refer to a range of examples to show how these skills developed over time.

b) Anayze media representation in one of your productions.

Page 17: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

The examiner says…

• Genre = you need to do more than tick off the features of your video / magazine against the relevant genre conventions. You need to consider theorist’s ideas and the importance or significance of genre

• Narrative = reflect on how your video works as a text. What is its purpose and how does narrative fit into this? Don’t just apply Todorov to try to prove your video fits a pattern. Think analytically about how your video is actually structured.

• Use the knowledge you have learnt in the other unit – media 2.0 might raise issues of audience and genre. Consumers become producers etc.

Page 18: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

Explain how you used conventional and or experimental narrative approaches in one of your productions.

1. Pick your music video. Define the concept of narrative then make some general points about how music videos work and that they don’t need to tell a story, though sometimes they do use narrative; then home in on your production to talk about what you decided to do with it in terms of narrative.

Page 19: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

2. Give a very brief account of the video, the artist, the genre of music then get into your analysis. You certainly need to consider the idea of structure and how you chose to organise the music video if not through a chronological narrative. This would give you the opportunity to consider how far a narrative structure emerges from it:– What governs the beginning, middle and end? Is it the

music? Or the performance? Or is there a story? – How have you played with time and space in the video?– How will the audience have understood it?

Page 20: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

3. Discuss how your video conforms to or subverts the ideas of one theorist – eg. How do Eisenstein’s ideas about montage reflect how your video is structured.

4.Then apply the ideas of another theorist and discuss how your video conforms to or subverts these – eg how far does your video reflect Levi-Strauss’s ideas about binary opposites. How far is your video structured through its use of pairings of binary opposites? How does this help create meaning for the audience?

Page 21: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

5. There is not a single right answer here: whatever you write will need to be justified and explained with close reference to your production. You will also need to consider it in relation to other examples that you have seen, to show how you either followed or broke conventions.

Page 22: A useful guide from the Chief Examiner

Revision Targets

• What do you need to do to put yourself in a position to do your best in the exam?

• How will you structure your remaining study time to ensure you do this?

• What revision strategies will you use?• How will you approach the task in the exam?– Five minutes to plan– 20minutes essay– 5minutes to check. What is on your checklist?

(examples, clear points, theorists, terminology)