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Ontario Outcome Chart: English - Grade 12 University Preparation
This outcome chart contains media education learning outcomes from the Ontario, Curriculum for English, Grades 12, with links to supporting resources on the Media Awareness Network site. It is expected that students will: | Understanding Media Texts | | - explain how media texts, including complex and challenging texts, are created to suit particular purposes and audiences
- interpret media texts, including complex or challenging texts, identifying and explaining with increasing insight the overt and implied messages they convey
- evaluate how effectively information, ideas, themes, issues, and opinions are communicated in media texts, including complex and challenging texts, and decide whether the texts achieve their intended purpose
- explain, with increasing insight, why the same media text might prompt different responses from different audiences
- identify and analyse the perspectives and/or biases evident in texts, including complex and challenging texts, commenting with understanding and increasing insight on any questions they may raise about beliefs, values, identity, and power
- explain, with increasing understanding and insight, how production, marketing, financing, distribution, and legal/regulatory factors influence the media industry
| Lessons that meet the Grade 12 expectations Advertising
Marketing Tactics Talking Back
Alternative Ads Parody Ads
Gender Roles in Advertising The Price of Happiness: On Advertising, Image, and Self Esteem
Gotta Have It! Designer & Brand Names
Kellogg Special K Ads
Advertising and Male Violence Sex in Advertising The Pornography Debate: Controversy in Advertising Alcohol
Don't Drink and Drive: Assessing the Effectiveness of Anti-Drinking Campaigns
Environment
Resource Racket: A Global Perspective on Resources and Consumption
Internet
Challenging Hate
Free Speech vs the Internet Propaganda Techniques on Hate Sites
The Privacy Dilemma Understanding Online Hate Media
Defining Pop Culture
Individuality vs. Conformity
Public Images Hype Political Cartoons
Magazine Production
Movies
Violence on Film
Movie Heroes and the Heroic Journey
The Blockbuster Movie
News Journalism How to Analyze the News
Crime in the News
You Be the Editor
Bias That's Me You're Talking About
The Front Page
Bias in the News
Fact Versus Opinion
Diversity Audit
Music
Popular Music and Music Videos The Function of Music
Stereotyping
Images of Learning: Secondary
The White Screen: Absent Voices in the Media Too White: Minority Representation in the Media
Perceptions of Youth and Crime Perceptions of Race and Crime
Ethnic and Visible Minorities in Entertainment Media Television
Camera Shots
Cinema Cops
Crime Perceptions Quiz
Broadcasting Codes Television Newscasts
Violence on Television Educational Contest
Independent Study Unit
Reality Check! Evaluating Online Information
Teachable Moments
Photographic Truth in the Digital Era
Pop Music Reaches Way Down
The "BadAd" Essay Writing Contest
A Fish Out of Water
A Gold Medal is Worth its Weight in Endorsements
A Tale of Two Cities
And Now a Word From Our Sponsor
Buy Nothing Day
Captive Audience?
Christmas Commercialism
Dove's Campaign for Real Beauty
Earth Day
Hurricane Katrina and Celebrities
Hurricane Katrina and the "Two-Photo Controversy"
Hurricane Katrina and the Internet
Smoke Screen
TV Turnoff Week
What Do Halloween Costumes Say? | | Understanding Media Forms, Conventions, and Techniques | | - identify general and specific characteristics of a variety of media forms and demonstrate insight into the way they shape content and create meaning
- identify conventions and/or techniques used in a variety of media forms and demonstrate insight into the way they convey meaning and influence their audience
| | Creating Media Texts | | - describe the topic, purpose, and audience for media texts they plan to create
- select the media form best suited to the topic, purpose, and audience for a media text they plan to create, and explain why it is the most appropriate choice
- identify a variety of conventions and/or techniques appropriate to a media form they plan to use, and explain why these will help communicate a specific aspect of their intended meaning most effectively
- produce media texts, including complex texts, for a variety of purposes and audiences, using the most appropriate forms, conventions, and techniques
| | Reflecting on Media Literacy Skills and Strategies | | - demonstrate insight into their strengths and weaknesses as media interpreters and producers, and practise the strategies they found most helpful when interpreting and creating particularly complex media texts to improve their skills
- explain how their skills in listening, speaking, reading, and writing help them interpret and produce media texts
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