The British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) is independent, non-governmental and not-for-profit. Our age ratings and free educational resources can help you explore with your students not only how to use age classification to guide decision making but also broader issues around decision making and personal and social responsibility, such as how young people develop as they grow up, the importance of making good and informed choices, and how the decisions we make reflect us as a society.
The British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) is independent, non-governmental and not-for-profit. Our age ratings and free educational resources can help you explore with your students not only how to use age classification to guide decision making but also broader issues around decision making and personal and social responsibility, such as how young people develop as they grow up, the importance of making good and informed choices, and how the decisions we make reflect us as a society.
This teacher pack includes everything you need to get your primary school students involved in our Create The Card competition, which invites UK-based 4-11 year olds to design their own BBFC Black Card for Sonic the Hedgehog 3 - out in cinemas this December.
The winner will see their design projected on the big screen before every UK cinema showing of the film.
The teacher pack includes:
An assembly PowerPoint presentation (also available in PDF format)
Accompanying teacher notes
Sonic The Hedgehog 3 activity sheets
Create The Card design template.
Our Key Stage 4 RSHE resource, Pornography; Pressures, Expectations and The Law, is designed to encourage young people to think critically about pornography, sex and relationships.
Drawing on the BBFC’s expertise in pornography regulation, this age-appropriate, two-lesson resource has been developed in collaboration with sexual health and wellbeing charity, Brook.
The two lessons are carefully mapped out, with detailed accompanying teacher guidance and notes, alongside clear objectives and learning outcomes tied to the curriculum. Both lesson plans also feature thought-provoking clips from popular films and TV shows, and come with a ‘What You Need To Know’ guide to support engagement with parents and caregivers.
Key topic areas include:
Exposure of young people to online pornography
Learning about sex through porn
Body image, representation and consent
How sexual attitudes, expectations and behaviours are impacted by porn
Production and sharing of youth-produced sexual imagery.
For more information on this and our other resources, visit the BBFC website.
The BBFC and the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust have picked five films to help engage learners at A-Level and above about the Holocaust, or more recent genocides.
The resource suggests some discussion points for each film to kick-start conversation with a class or group. The resource covers topics such as the Holocaust and genocide distortion or denial, racism, bigotry and hatred, both in the UK and across the world.
While these films do explore challenging and emotional themes, they have all been suggested by BBFC compliance officers due to the strong educational value of the content. If you’re planning to show any of these films in the classroom, remember to check the age rating first at the BBFC website.
Marvel’s 25th instalment, an origin story about Shang-Chi, was classified at 12A in cinemas. Find out more about this classification decision in this detailed case study.
Curriculum links: This case study can be used for those studying ‘Section A: Media Industries and Audiences’ on the OCR A-Level Media Studies specification.
The classification journey of Disney’s first feature-length animation, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, provides a useful case study of how BBFC standards and audience expectations have changed over time.
Curriculum links: This case study can be used for those studying ‘Section A: Media Industries and Audiences’ on the OCR A-Level Media Studies specification.
The Jungle Book is a children’s adventure based on Rudyard Kipling’s collection of stories in which a boy - or ‘man-cub’ - called Mowgli is raised in the Indian jungle by wolves. This case study outlines the classification issues in Disney’s animated original film (1967) and the live-action adaptation (2016), discussion points for the classroom and further recommended viewing.
Curriculum links: This case study can be used for those studying ‘Section A: Media Industries and Audiences’ on the OCR A-Level in Media Studies specification.
Room (Lenny Abrahamson) is a drama about a young woman and her son who struggle to adjust to life after escaping the room in which they’ve been held captive for many years. This case study outlines the classification issues in the film, discussion points for the classroom and recommended further viewing.
Curriculum links: This case study can be used for those studying ‘Content of Critical Approaches to Film - Component 1: Film History - Section C: Ideology’ on the OCR AS-level specification’.
Find more case studies on the BBFC website: https://www.bbfc.co.uk/education/case-studies
Gus Van Sant’s Elephant (2003) follows the lives of several students studying at Watt High School in the suburbs of Portland, Oregon, as they go about their everyday lives. The students’ daily routines are violently interrupted when two of them bring death and destruction to the school.
This case study outlines the classification issues in the film, discussion points for the classroom and recommended viewing.
Curriculum links: This case study can be used for those studying ‘Critical Approaches to Film: Ideology - Outsiders’ on the A-level OCR specification.
Find more case studies on the BBFC website: https://www.bbfc.co.uk/education/case-studies
Ava DuVernay’s Selma (2014) is a powerful historical drama based on the events of the Selma to Montgomery voting rights marches of 1965. The film dramatises these events through the lens of Dr. Martin Luther King and narrates the political and personal struggles that he and his community faced in order to use their activism to make meaningful change.
This case study outlines the classification issues in the film, discussion points for the classroom and recommended viewing.
Curriculum links: This case study can be used for those studying 'American film since 2005: Section B: Comparative Study of Contemporary American Independent Cinema (post 2005) - Mainstream film’ on the WJEC AS/A-level specification.
Find more case studies on the BBFC website: https://www.bbfc.co.uk/education/case-studies
Star Wars: The Force Awakens is a sci-fi action adventure in which a young woman becomes embroiled in a galactic conflict. This case study outlines the classification issues in the film, discussion points for the classroom and recommended viewing.
Curriculum links: This case study can be used for those studying ‘Content of Critical Approaches to Film: Section A: Contemporary British and US Film - Contemporary US film’ on the A-level OCR specification.
Find more case studies on the BBFC website: https://www.bbfc.co.uk/education/case-studies
Dil Se… (Mani Ratnam, 1998) is a Hindi language Indian romantic thriller that blends Bollywood spectacle with an arthouse sensibility. The film’s themes of obsessive love and violence are set against a highly political narrative that explores issues of separatism in India during the 1990s.
This case study outlines the classification issues in the film, discussion points for the classroom and recommended viewing.
Curriculum links: This case study can be used for those studying ‘Component 2: Global filmmaking perspectives - Section A (Two film study) - Outside Europe’ on the A-level WJEC / Eduqas specification.
Find more case studies on the BBFC website: https://www.bbfc.co.uk/education/case-studies
Todd Haynes returns to the melodrama genre in his 2015 adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s novel, The Price of Salt. Much like the novel on which it is based, Carol explores themes of love and desire set against a backdrop of social and legal discrimination.
This case study outlines the classification issues in the film, discussion points for the classroom and recommended viewing.
Curriculum links: This case study can be used for those studying ‘Component 1: Section B - American Film since 2005’ on the A-level WJEC / Eduqas specification.
Find more case studies on the BBFC website: https://www.bbfc.co.uk/education/case-studies
Disney’s Zootropolis (Rich Moore, Byron Howard, Jared Bush) is set in a fictional city in which animals live in harmony together in the big smoke. This case study outlines the classification issues in the film, discussion points for the classroom and recommended viewing.
Curriculum links: This case study can be used for those studying ‘Critical Approaches to Film: Section A - Contemporary British and US Film’ on the A-level OCR specification.
Find more case studies on the BBFC website: https://www.bbfc.co.uk/education/case-studies
Wadjda is a sweet, insightful and uplifting story about a young Saudi Arabian girl who steadfastly defies the social and cultural rules of her community in order to make her dreams of owning and riding a bike happen. The film is directed by Haifaa Al-Mansour, the first female director to make a film in Saudi Arabia, and offers a female perspective on life in contemporary Saudi Arabia, told from the point of a view of a young girl.
This case study outlines the classification issues in the film, discussion points for the classroom and recommended viewing.
Curriculum links: This case study can be used for those studying ‘Component 2: Global Film: Narrative, Representation and Film Style - Non- English Language Film’ on the GCSE WJEC / Eduqas specification
Find more case studies on the BBFC website: https://www.bbfc.co.uk/education/case-studies
Pride (2014) is a British comedy drama, from 2014, in which an LGBTQ+ group raises money in support of the National Union of Mineworkers in the summer of 1984. This case study outlines the classification issues in the film, discussion points for the classroom and recommended viewing.
Curriculum links: This case study can be used for those studying ‘Critical Approaches to Film: Section A: Contemporary British and US Film - Contemporary US film’ on the A-level OCR specification.
Find more case studies on the BBFC website: https://www.bbfc.co.uk/education/case-studies
Our Key Stage 3 PSHE resource, Making Choices: Sex, Relationships and BBFC Age Ratings will help your class develop strategies for coping with peer pressure, and enable them to recognise the differences between real life and on-screen relationships. Key areas of focus include:
Representations of sex and relationships in films on and offline
Decision making and peer influence
How and why age ratings are given to films and other content
How the BBFC reflect public and teenager views when making those decisions
The resource pack includes three one hour lesson plans, teacher guidance and ready to use powerpoints and classroom resources. All lessons support teachers to meet the statutory RSE curriculum.
For more education resources, head to the BBFC website.
This resource is aimed at Key Stage 2 learners, and is accredited by the PSHE Association. These lesson plans and activities help pupils develop the tools to make the best choices about what to watch, when and where - and are accompanied by comprehensive teacher guidance notes and supporting activity resources.
The lessons look at age ratings, why they exist, and allow KS2 pupils to consider issues such as:
What age ratings are and how they work
The suitability of content
How they make their own decisions
Why regulations and rules are in place
Where they should go for more information when deciding what to watch, and how to steer clear of content that might be unsuitable
The resource pack includes two one hour lesson plans, teacher guidance and ready to use powerpoints and classroom resources. The lessons use a variety of techniques including role play, thought mapping, and scenarios for discussion.
For more interactive classroom resources, see the BBFC website.
Accredited by the PSHE Association, these lessons support pupils in understanding how to make safe viewing choices online and what to do if they see something that is not age appropriate.
The resource pack includes two one hour lesson plans, teacher guidance and ready to use powerpoints and classroom resources.
Learning objectives include:
understanding that there are age-ratings that can help us make choices about what to watch
learning how to make good viewing choices that are right for a person’s age
learning about what to do if someone watches something that makes them feel upset or worried.
Our lesson plans also support teachers to meet the Department for Education’s statutory guidance for Relationships and Health education in the following areas:
Online relationships (in Relationships education)
the rules and principles for keeping safe online, how to recognise risks, harmful content and contact, and how to report them.
Internet Safety and harms (in Health education)
why social media, some computer games and online gaming, for example, are age restricted.
where and how to report concerns and get support with issues online.
For more interactive classroom resources, see the BBFC website.