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MUSTANG (Erguven, 2015) A Level Film Studies Revision PowerPoint
This 69 slide full-colour interactive PowerPoint Presentation covers very targeted learing objectives for the EDUQAS A Level Film Studies Specification on Global CInema. Objectives include: Core Study Areas (Mise-en-scene, Social and Political Contexts, Reception, Exam Questions and Mark Schemes, and Production notes.
This resource will be used in a two-hour lesson and promotes discussion of key symbols and themes, as well as allowing for close analysis of mise-en-scene.
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest - Close Analysis
This Resource is a 44 Slide interactive PowerPoint Presentation offering students a lot of room for discussion and debate around the identity politics within the film, as well a the contextual issues that would have influenced the narrative and the filmmakers (as well as the novelist).
Students are encouraged to reflect and to discuss, activities get them involved in dissecting the film’s meanings - both literal and subtextual.
Perfect revision for the Eduqas A-Level Film Studies Component 1A. Paper.
https://resource.download.wjec.co.uk/vtc/2017-18/17-18_3-7/eng/sam2-component-1.pdf
'Captain Fantastic' Scene Analysis
For Eduqas A Level Film Studies, this 43-slide full colour interactive presentation prepares students to analyse how cinematography and mise-en-scene are used to convey key narrative meanings. Students are encouraged to question, discuss and share their own thoughts and there is a strong emphasis on uses of cinematic terminology as well as analysis and exam preparation (with a practice exam question).
Moonlight - A Level Film Studies EXAM FOCUS
This 25 slide full colour PowerPoint Presentation provides helpful exam preparation for ideology and spectatorship (Eduqas Film Studies Component 1B.). The resource is closely focused on what examiners will expect, and offers talking points, discussion questions, and commentary on core study areas and representation.
EDUQAS A Level Film Studies - Gender in Some Like It Hot
This 25 Slide PowerPoint Presentation can be used for an hour long lesson on gender representations in Billy Wilder’s 1959 film ‘Some Like It Hot’. This can be used for the Component 1A. American Film Exam preparation in Film Studies, or it could be useful in AS Film Studies or Media Studies to discuss gender transgression, homoerotic subtext and feminist themes or messages in the film.
The film challenges gender binaries and stereotypes and cleverly uses subtext and indirect or double meanings to get across its progressive messages in subtle ways that would not have alienated 1950’s American audiences.
This is an interactive presentation that ends with a 15 minute exercise.
CAROL (2015, Todd Haynes) A Level Film Studies Resource
This is a 63 slide full-colour interactive PowerPoint Presentation.
It provides a two hour lesson plan covering the production context, social & political contexts, reception,** spectatorship ** (including past exam questions, Hall’s reception theory and how to apply it to CAROL, viewer positioning, binaries in the narrative, and symbolism in the mise-en-scene.
This is useful to EDUQAS A Level Film Studies Tutors but also to MEDIA studies teachers.
***Also useful for LGBTQ+ History Month **
Billy Wilder - Auteur Poster
This colourful poster outlines the key ‘signature’ features distinctive of WIlder’s films It makes an attractive classroom display that also provides helpful memory prompts for Eduquas A-Level Film Studies Students who are sitting the Component 1. Exam Paper.
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RELIGION, HUMAN RIGHTS & SOCIAL JUSTICE
Ideal for teaching and revising the AQA Religious Studies A, Component 2 – thematic studiesTheme F: Religion, human rights and social justice (GCSE).
This 56-slide PowerPoint presentation covers the AQA curriculm and textbook’s main definitions and helps
GCSE students prepare a good set of answers for the exams.
It will encourage critical thinking about the examination board’s definitions and assumptions at certain points, but will not prevent students from saying the “right” answers needed to pass the examination.
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Religious Versus Secular Laws
This 38 full color **interactive **slide presentation can be used to teach many concepts pertaining to religion and society. It explains the relationship between modern states (primarily the United States and Great Britain) and religions (with focus on Christianity & Islam). Concepts such as secularism, liberalism, theocracy and apostasy are included. Religious teachings are used and analysed, so that students are taught to demonstrate knowledge of **religious approaches to law **as well as applications and analysis. Exam practice questions are provided as well as guidance on how to answer them.
This is also useful for citizenship and cultural studies courses.
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Religious Attitudes to Sex: Christianity & Islam
This full colour 13-slide PowerPoint presentation covers the principle beliefs about sex and its proper context in both the Christian and Islamic faiths.
It provides a good overview for this topic for the GCSE in Religious Studies and works well as a lesson plan if coupled with a revision quiz or practice test question. THe resource ends with two questions that could be used as discussion prompts or retention checks.
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Christianity, Crime and Punishment
This 23 slide full colour animated PowerPoint Presentation introduces students to the **Christian outlook on crime & punishment (including the concepts of retribution, deterrence and rehabilitation).
It offers an open and questioning approach that allows students to weigh different outlooks and consider the concept of ‘crime’ and the reasons for punishment.
It prompts discussion and can be used to stimulate reflection.
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Religious Studies: Marriage & the Family
This 30 slide full-colour interactive powerpoint presentation informs students about religious beliefs about marriage and the family. Topics covered include the Muslim and Christian marriage ceremony as well as Civil Partnerships, definitions of marriage, arranged marriages, reasons for marriage, roles in marriage, vows, the nature of families, cohabitation and same-sex marriage.
The resource helps students to prepare for the GCSE Exams in Religious Studies as well as helping students of religious faith to understand the rite of marraige and how religions and non-religious people view it.
The resource offers lots of discussion prompts to encourage class discussion.
This resource could be used as a two-hour lesson.
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Understanding Religious and Secular Laws
This is a 30 slide colour PowerPoint Presentation, with animated slides and interactive questions. The last several slides are designed for exam preparation for OCR General Certificate of Secondary Education.
It is also useful for discussing broader questions, such as the differences between morality and law, or secularism and theocracy.
Learning Outcomes:
Understand the difference between secular and religious laws.
For United Kingdom GCSE Religious Studies (9–1)
Unit J625/06: Religion, philosophy and ethics in the modern world from a Christian perspective
Unit J625/07: Religion, philosophy and ethics in the modern world from a Muslim perspective
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Religious Studies Bundle
This bundle contains three colorful, interactive PowerPoint Presentations that can be used for full lessons on religious beliefs about a variety of topics, including: human rights, social justice, law, secularism, crime and punishment.
It references both Christianity and Islam and can be used to broaden discussion to more philosophical questions such as:
What is the relationship bewteen religious concepts of justice and society’s laws?
Which is the best reason / purpose for punishment?
Why do liberals believe that morality is a private matter?
1970's - a decade of change
This 51-slide PowerPoint Presentation provides an overview of key events in the United States during the decade of the 1970s, including some 1960’s history to provide background context. The presentation covers political, social and cultural aspects of the era, including the civil rights and womens movements, anti-war protests, political scandals, anti-war agitation, and popular culture. This presentation gives students a feel for the historical climate that can provide excellent background context for novels, films and works of art from the period, as well as general history.
The presentation could provide a full lesson and may be used in tandem with study texts such as One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, The Post, Apocalypse Now, I Am Not Your Negro, Hamburger Hill, and many others…
Understanding Tolerance Presentation
This is a full-color 27 slide interactive PowerPoint presentation. It forms the basis of an assembly or a full two hour lesson (depending upon time taken for class discussion/debate).
It is designed to prompt discussion and debate and to get youngsters thinking for themselves and reflecting on the complexities and problems associated with the concept of ‘tolerance’. It encourages them to actively define tolerance, and to reflect upon their definition, based on careful analysis of real life case studies and examples.
This lesson can be used can be used in an American or British context. It would work with a wide variety of age groups and can help in teaching citizenship, PSHE, RS, or British Values.
It could also work well as a starter exercise for the study of Liberalism (politics).
What is Tolerance?
This exercise provides interactive discussion prompters and tasks that help students to reflect carefully on what they think tolerance really means. It should form the basis for two 1-hour lessons, for secondary students between ages 14 - 18.
The aim is to foster a critical discussion about tolerant societies, and to help students to reflect upon whether there is a distinction between tolerance and cultural/ moral relativism.
How can tolerance be a principled approach that is fair to both individuals and communities?
Is tolerance fair to **all **citizens?
Does a tolerant state promote genuine** intellectual** diversity?
How can a state promote tolerance without becoming an intolerant state, i.e. without promoting censorship of controversial ideas?