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Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results Save | Export
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Sosulski, Michael J. – Unterrichtspraxis/Teaching German, 2013
This article explores the possibilities for effecting Transformative Learning in students of German language and culture through the use of popular music videos, in both the target and the students' own languages. Transformative Learning, a term that has differing valences in numerous academic disciplines, is employed here in its social-scientific…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Popular Culture, German, Critical Viewing
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Rodesiler, Luke – Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, 2010
Media messages are increasingly packaged in ways that blur distinctions between genres. The U.S. Army National Guard's recent campaign incorporating rock stars and popular music to appeal to potential recruits exemplifies this trend, as commercials and music videos become one and the same. Given this increasing trend, critical media literacy…
Descriptors: Literacy, Media Literacy, Mass Media Effects, Popular Culture
O'Neill, Julie Treick – Rethinking Schools, 2012
Natural gas production in Wyoming is a lucrative and influential industry. All the perks--jobs, education spending, the budget surplus--are huge incentives for communities and the fossil fuel-friendly state legislature to play along, to stay silent. And many are willing. There has been natural gas production in the state for almost a century, but…
Descriptors: Hydraulics, Fuels, Global Education, Site Analysis
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Beck, Bernard – Multicultural Perspectives, 2010
Three recent movies about war are examined. All have been honored by critics and welcomed by audiences. The three movies are very different from one another. They reflect different ways of thinking and feeling about war. More specifically, they represent ways we relate to the troops we send into battle and our concerns about whether we have done…
Descriptors: War, Didacticism, Popular Culture, Military Service
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Skinner, Emily – Voices from the Middle, 2007
Teachers are coming to understand the value of using a student's interests, habits, and questions as a starting point for instruction. In this article, Skinner introduces "Teenage Addiction," a voluntary seventh-grade after-school writing/popular culture club that helped students view popular culture through a critical lens and then write about…
Descriptors: Mentors, Popular Culture, Writing Workshops, Media Literacy
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Stuckey, Heather; Kring, Kelly – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2007
This chapter describes the use of popular film and semiotics for the development of critical media literacy in a graduate-level education course entitled "Pop Culture as Pedagogy: The Role of Entertainment Media in Teaching for Critical Consciousness and Critical Media Literacy." The course focused on analysis of different forms of pop culture,…
Descriptors: Nonprint Media, Education Courses, Semiotics, Media Literacy
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Fink, Maxwell A.; Foote, Deborah C. – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2007
Many educators lament the UNESCO study showing that by the time the average teen graduates from high school he or she has spent more than fifteen thousand hours watching television and only eleven thousand in the classroom (Gorebel, 1998). Rather than regretting this "condition," colleges, universities, and educators of adults and children should…
Descriptors: Humanities Instruction, Adult Students, Popular Culture, Mass Media Effects
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Bunz, Ulla – Communication Teacher, 2006
Undergraduate students often memorize a keyword or definition for an exam without a deeper understanding or the ability to apply the meaning of the concept. While using examples during a lecture may help, the combination of movies and verbal review has been shown to be a valuable instructional tool, increasing recall (Elischberger & Roebers, 2001)…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Organizational Communication, Concept Teaching, Class Activities
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Jackson, Steven J. – Journal of Experiential Education, 1993
Describes a college course on the sociology of sport, in which students reflect on their own experiences and practices in sport, engage in critical analysis of the taken-for-granted values and assumptions associated with sport, and do construct analysis and deconstruction of televised sport as it promotes certain interests and marginalizes others.…
Descriptors: Athletics, Course Content, Critical Viewing, Criticism
Trier, James D. – 2000
This paper describes the use of school films (popular movies that are in some way about an educator or student) to engage student teachers in critically reflective practice. The paper begins by describing the main goals of the effort, examining the basic structure of the practicum that involves these films, and explaining the various constraints…
Descriptors: Creative Teaching, Critical Thinking, Critical Viewing, Elementary Secondary Education
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Skretta, John – English Journal, 1997
Discusses a high school unit involving the cartoon characters "Beavis" and "Butt-head." Examines how social values and social conflicts affect and mirror language use. Describes Beavis and Butt-head projects, and objections to the unit. Argues that schools must embrace nonprint texts to help students become skilled, literate,…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Critical Thinking, Critical Viewing, English Instruction
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Smudde, Peter M.; Luecke, John R. – Communication Teacher, 2005
Integrating "The West Wing" in public relations courses can effectively dramatize the concrete and abstract dimensions of public relations. In turn, students see public relations in action (albeit fictionally so) and learn much about it through structured lessons. From individual writing assignments about situations in "The West Wing," to the…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Assignments, Problem Based Learning, Public Relations
Hanna, Jack C. – 1989
Television plays a monumentally large role in U.S. society; no one is immune from its effects. The government does not control television, but it is not far from the truth to say that television controls the political life of this country. This paper analyzes the democratic objectives and effects of television in the United States. A brief history…
Descriptors: Communications, Critical Viewing, Democracy, Mass Media
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Paul, Dierdre Glenn – MultiCultural Review, 2001
Investigated graduate preservice teachers' perceptions of urban students and schools, exploring how they arrived at these perceptions through personal experiences/contacts and other means. Students completed surveys about their image of urban schools and students and examined commercial Hollywood films, discussing their role in shaping…
Descriptors: Critical Viewing, Cultural Awareness, Elementary Secondary Education, Films
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Hepburn, Mary A. – Social Education, 1997
Summarizes a wealth of evidence establishing a causal relationship between television viewing and violence. Outlines a series of corrective measures available within the fields of media literacy, public policy, and education. Briefly discusses related issues such as government versus self-regulation, and First Amendment protections. (MJP)
Descriptors: Critical Viewing, Elementary Secondary Education, Mass Media Effects, Mass Media Role
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