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SECTION A
K E Y PO I N
T S
Q1A IN A NUTSHELLDirectly asks you to evaluate how your media production skills
have developed progressively from AS to A2Critical reflection on creative processes and decision making in
the context of a range of productions and progress made from AS to A2.
RESEARCH AND PLANNINGHow much did research inform the development of your own
ideas?What types of research were most significant in developing
your own ideas?What difficulties did you encounter in your research?How did you plan your production work and what types of
planning were most effective?What issues did you experience in moving from the planning to
the production phase? How useful was your planning in the production phase?
What aspects should you have planned and prepared more thoroughly?
CREATIVITY
What do you understand by ‘creativity’ and to what extent have you been creative?
How have you tried to facilitate and encourage your own creativity?Did you experience limits/blocks on your own creativity?How easy/difficult was it to be creative while still working to the
brief?Did working within conventions stifle your creativity?To what extent did you need to work with others and ‘bounce ideas’
off other people to be truly creative?How much of your creativity was about trying to picture things in
your mind’s eye?How much of your creativity was about trial and error?To what extent was a lack of confidence an issue in terms of your
creativity?To what extent was a lack of technical competence/confidence an
obstacle to your creativity?
DIGITAL TECHNOLOGYPhotoshopiMovieFinal Cut ExpressGarage BandWixPreziBloggerWord or PowerPointYouTubeCameraInternet(anything you used for your evaluations)
POST-PRODUCTIONEDITING – techniques used; style; pace; transitions and how the
editing helped communicate meaning to the audience.
SOUNDTRACK & SOUND EFFECTS – the choices made and the impact of these choices on audiences.
SPECIAL EFFECTS – discuss any special effects (fast-motion, slow-motion etc) and any effects you used to distort/edit images. Again, the emphasis should be on the way these effects impact on audiences and communicate meaning.
USING CONVENTIONS FROM REAL MEDIA TEXTS
How much was your own production influenced by existing texts?How did you identify the conventions? How did you research into
existing texts?Why follow conventions? Think about the relationship with audiences
here.Which conventions did you follow?How easy was it to follow conventions in your own work? Were there
any obstacles?To what extent, if any, did you depart from existing conventions?
What effects were you hoping to achieve by breaking some of the conventions?
To what extent did adherence to conventions limit your own creativity?
Q1B IN A NUTSHELLThis question requires a more distanced approach – a textual
analysis of one production outcome – as a media text – to demonstrate the ability to apply a theoretical concept to the text.
WHAT DO YOU NEED TO BE ABLE TO DO WITH THEORISTS AND THEORIES?
You do NOT need to:Learn a load of quotesExplain their theories in great depthKnow them allYou DO need to:Use a fewBe able to apply them to your work/ case studiesConsider how useful/ not useful they are when discussing your work/ case studies
HOW TO USE THEORISTS…Quote SummariseComment
Assume your reader knows about the theory/ theorist.Don’t explain the theory; use it.A Todorovian analysis would argue…Mulvey’s notion of the Male Gaze provides a useful
way of understanding the video in that…Kate Wales statement that “Genre is... an intertextual
concept” could be useful here because…
MEDIA LANGUAGE
Essentially this is asking for a detailed textual analysis of your production which explores the meanings created by micro elements.
What are the denotation and connotation present in the workWhat key decision have been made by the producer and what meaning
are they meant to create (If a film maker has chosen to employ a particular sign at one point from a range of possibilities that is a ‘paradigmatic’ choice e.g. what costume to choose for a character).
How do signs work together to create meaning (syntagmatic relationship)How has the film maker try to encode meaning – what techniques? Are
they successful ie is it easy to decode the production? Could be be decoded in a different way?
What are different ways this text could be read and understood ( Audience Concept stuff)
What ideologies/myths/ meta narratives does the work reinforce or challenge?
What effect might this production have on the audience – emotion stuff, role modelling, challenging beliefs/ ideas
Why are any of these things important?
AUDIENCEWho is the target audience for the production? ( AC Neilsen TAGS,
Rubicam's 4Cs Cross Cultural Consumer Characterisation ), how do you know?
Would this production be successful with it target audience? How might it be read/understood by a different target audience?
What uses and gratifications will the target audience get from the production?
What effect might the production have on audiences?What is the Dominant/Hegemonic/Preferred reading of this text?
What is a possible Negotiated reading of this text? What would be an Oppositional reading?
How would this text suit a Pomo audience (Gauntlett – meaning is fluid and the audience is intelligent)
In what ways is the work an example of Jenkins Participatory Culture (audiences are no longer just consumers, they are also producers and users. They create and consume, participate and publish, download and upload, receive and share)
NARRATIVE
Does the product follow a linear narrative?Does the production adhere to or subvert narrative conventions?How does the narrative support the establishment of genre?How have narrative techniques been used to appeal to the audience?Does the text have a clear narrative (in other words, are the
audience able to understand what is happening) Is there a narrative thread?Is there any suggestion of resolution in the product or, instead, do we
have elements of the beginning/middle of the film, but not its end?How could the product be interpreted using narrative theory? Propp /
Todorov/ Levi-Strauss/ Boardwell and Thompson/ Three Act Structure (Set Up and Catalyst for Thriller)
Why is narrative important?Why is it good to challenge narrative conventions?
AYO (ANALYSE YOUR OWN) PRODUCTION!
Watch your film opening or music video (it should be on your blog from last year).
Create a presentation which ANALYSES the thriller or music video as if it’s not yours.
Try to cover the following areas: Genre Representation Audience Media language NarrativeUse the question prompt sheets to guide your responses.Present back to the class.