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Mercado, Antonieta – Communication Teacher, 2019
This activity highlights the concept of cultural hegemony, illustrating it by a reflection on the images of success and successful people portrayed in the media. The purpose of the exercise is to introduce students to this concept, and for them to examine how hegemonic views of others and the self affect the way they conceptualize success and…
Descriptors: Success, Mass Media Effects, Cultural Influences, Gender Differences
Shuster, Kate – Southern Poverty Law Center (NJ1), 2009
We live in a climate ripe for noise: Media outlets and 24-hour news cycles mean that everyone with access to a computer has access to a megaphone to broadcast their views. Never before in human history has an opinion had the opportunity to reach so many so quickly regardless of its accuracy or appropriateness. Of course, it's difficult to hear…
Descriptors: Access to Information, Mass Media Effects, Opinions, Evidence
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Morge, Shelby P. – Mathematics Teacher, 2007
This article highlights a series of activities designed to elicit students' mathematics-related beliefs, particularly those related to gender. As a result of the activities, females in upper-level classes rated themselves as having less confidence than males, and viewing a movie clip was sufficient for some students to modify their descriptions of…
Descriptors: Mathematics Activities, Gender Differences, Student Attitudes, Beliefs
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Smith, C. Zoe; Woodward, Anne-Marie – Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, 1999
Describes a research assignment (called "photo-elicitation") in a graduate course on the role of photography in society in which students interview people similar to the subjects in the photographs to discover how the photographs affect them. Includes material from one research project interviewing three recovering drug addicts responding to Larry…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Drug Abuse, Higher Education, Journalism Research
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Wyatt, Justin – Journal of Film and Video, 1993
Describes a course for upper-level undergraduates entitled "AIDS, Mass Media, and Cultural Politics." Describes the course's 10 units, also listing screenings and readings. (SR)
Descriptors: Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, Course Content, Course Descriptions, Higher Education
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Joseph, Paul R. – Social Education, 2000
Believes that using popular culture images of law, lawyers, and the legal system is an effective way for teaching about real law. Offers examples of incorporating popular culture images when teaching about law. Includes suggestions for teaching activities, a mock trial based on Dr. Seuss's book "Yertle the Turtle," and additional…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Educational Strategies, Higher Education, Law Schools
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Tillman, Joe – Clearing House, 1999
Describes a three-day unit for eighth-grade geography classes that uses a videotape of an ABC News Special to combine a lesson on the Bosnian Civil War with a media-analysis activity. (SR)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Foreign Countries, Geography Instruction, Grade 8
Handford, Charlene J. – 1989
This paper describes a graduate course at Louisiana State University in Shreveport, entitled "The Electronic Church, with an Emphasis on Its Evangelists." The paper addresses some of the ways in which criticism is taught via the television evangelists. Following a mini-course in speech analysis, the course focuses on the various aspects…
Descriptors: Broadcast Television, Churches, Communication Research, Course Content
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Trask, David S. – Teaching History: A Journal of Methods, 1996
Argues that the fragmentary nature of mass media has made students suspicious of the traditional lecture format. Recommends that history teachers incorporate questions concerning source material and knowledge (e.g. How do I know this?) into their presentations. Suggests a number of activities and texts that can be used to involve students in…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Critical Thinking, Educational Objectives, Evaluative Thinking
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Crosson, Lesley – Social Education, 1989
Points out the power that television has in shaping opinions and in promoting and banishing stereotypes. Presents examples of positive role models in both entertainment and news programing. Emphasizes the importance of reflecting a pluralistic society in news reporting. (LS)
Descriptors: Blacks, Cultural Pluralism, Hispanic Americans, Mass Media Effects
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Mulderink, Earl F., III – Teaching History: A Journal of Methods, 1996
Provides some useful guidelines, activities, and a few warnings concerning using documentary movies in a U. S. history course. Although documentaries can pique student interest, they need to be previewed first and presented in historical context with supporting materials. Includes an overview of a course content and accompanying films. (MJP)
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Course Content, Documentaries, Educational Resources
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Nelson, Murry R. – Social Studies, 1997
Explores the production, distribution, and content of the, "Horrors of War," a series of trading cards produced between 1938 and 1942. Created by a Baptist advertising executive the cards used graphic images to communicate an antiwar message to young adolescents. Discusses possible learning activities used in conjunction with the cards.…
Descriptors: Advocacy, Conflict, Cultural Images, Foreign Countries