|

Ontario Outcome Chart: Language - Grade 5
This outcome chart contains media-related learning outcomes from the Ontario, Grade 5 Language curriculum, with links to supporting resources on the Media Awareness Network site.
| Understanding Media Texts | | By the end of Grade 5, students will: - identify the purpose and audience for a variety of media texts
- use overt and implied messages to draw inferences and construct meaning in media texts
- express opinions about ideas, issues, and/or experiences presented in media texts, and give evidence from the texts to support their opinions
- explain why different audiences might respond differently to the same media text
- identify whose point of view is presented or reflected in a media text, ask questions to identify missing or alternative points of view, and, where appropriate, suggest how a more balanced view might be represented
- identify who produces various media texts, the reason for their production, how they are produced, and how they are funded
| Lessons that meet the grade five expectations Advertising
Advertising All Around Us
Anatomy of Cool
Media Kids
Packaging Tricks
You've Gotta Have a Gimmick!
Elections and the Media
Junk Food Jungle
Looks Good Enough to Eat
Alcohol
Messages About Drinking
Kids, Alcohol and Advertising: Young Drinkers
Kids, Alcohol and Advertising: Understanding Brands
Kids, Alcohol and Advertising: Interpreting Media Messages
Body Image
Image Gap
Mirror Image
Prejudice and Body Image
Gender Portrayal
Comic Book Characters
What's in a Word?
Newspapers
Newspaper Ads
Reporter for a Day
News and Newspapers: Across the Curriculum
Privacy
What Students Need to Know about Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy
Sports
Violence in Sports
Stereotyping
Sheroes and Heroes
Villains, Heroes and Heroines
Stereotype and Bias: The Three Little Pigs and the Big Bad Wolf
Stereotyping and Bias
Television
Teaching TV: Critically Evaluating TV
A Day in the Life
Television as a Story Teller
Learning With Television
Television Techniques
Who Does What?
The Constructed World of TV Families
Taking Charge of TV Violence
Thinking About Television and Movies
TV Stereotypes
How to Analyze the NewsThe Broadcast Project
TV Turnoff Week - Teachable Moment
Tobacco
Do You Believe This Camel?
Freedom to Smoke
True Story
Thinking Like a Tobacco Company Student Tutorial (Licensed Resource) Passport to the Internet: Student tutorial for Internet literacy (Grades 4-8) | | Understanding Media Forms, Conventions, and Techniques | | By the end of Grade 5, students will: - describe in detail the main elements of some media forms
- identify the conventions and techniques used in some familiar media forms and explain how they help convey meaningmeaning and influence or engage the audience
| | Creating Media Texts | | By the end of Grade 5, students will: - describe in detail the topic, purpose, and audience for media texts they plan to create
- identify an appropriate form to suit the purpose and audience for a media text they plan to create, and explain why it is an appropriate choice
- identify conventions and techniques appropriate to the form chosen for a media text they plan to create, and explain how they will use the conventions and techniques to help communicate their message
- produce a variety of media texts for specific purposes and audiences, using appropriate forms, conventions, and techniques
| | Reflecting on Media Literacy Skills and Strategies | | By the end of Grade 5, students will: - identify, with some support and direction, what strategies they found most helpful in making sense of and creating media texts, and explain how these and other strategies can help them improve as media viewers/listeners/producers
- explain, with some support and direction, how their skills in listening, speaking, reading, and writing help them to make sense of and produce media texts
|
|
|
|
 |