Tuesday, 16 March 2021

PPE Preparation: Paper 2

Here you'll find everything you need to prepare for PPE Paper 2 coming up on Thursday 25 March. 

As the government have suggested, we are going to test you on topics you have learned in class or most recently as this is the fairest way of giving everyone the best chance to show what they can do. This means for Paper 2 you will be doing Section A on Television. 

The following blogpost will help you to revise this topic and you can also look back at your assessments in the Autumn Term which were also Paper 2 Section A tasks on Television. We recommend making revision cards or knowledge organisers and practicing questions in the revision pack we gave out in December.

IMPORTANT NOTE: Due to exam rooming issues with the video clip for Media Paper 2, we will be taking on PPE Paper 2 (Television) FIRST and then doing PPE Paper 1 the following week.


PPE Paper 2 topics

This is what is coming up in PPE Paper 2 along with a link to a previous learner response task that will help your revision and preparation:

Television


Paper 2 revision and preparation

To help you prepare for Paper 2, Ms Fowler has produced two brilliant lesson videos taking you through the skills you need for this exam. These will also remind you of some of the key information about the Television topic and the CSPs Doctor Who - An Unearthly Child and Class - Co-Owner of a Lonely Heart.

Even better, we've made the two episodes available to watch on Google Drive as they have now been removed from iPlayer or Netflix (you'll need to login with your Greenford Google login to view):


Below are the lesson videos to watch and make notes/revision cards as you go through them.

Paper 2 Television revision lesson:
 

How to analyse the clip in the Paper 2 exam: 



Paper 2: Television preparation tasks

Work through the following tasks to help prepare for Paper 2 on Television:

1) Watch the two lesson videos above in full, making notes, revision cards or creating a knowledge organiser as you watch.

2) Look back over the blogposts for Television (linked above - plus your own blogposts with all the answers) and add to your revision cards or knowledge organisers.

3) Look at your learner response blogpost for the Television assessment in November and revise the key areas you need to improve for the PPE. 

Good luck!

PPE Preparation: Paper 1

Here you'll find everything you need to prepare for PPE Paper 1 coming up on Tuesday 30 March. 

As the government have suggested, we are going to test you on topics you have learned in class or most recently as this is the fairest way of giving everyone the best chance to show what they can do. 

The following blogpost will help you to revise the right topics. We recommend making revision cards or knowledge organisers and practicing questions in the revision pack are giving out.

IMPORTANT NOTE: Due to exam rooming issues with the video clip for Media Paper 2, we will be taking on PPE Paper 2 (Television) FIRST and then doing PPE Paper 1 the following week.


PPE Paper 1 topics

This is what is coming up in PPE Paper 1:

Section A: Language and Representation

Unseen Media analysis
This will be a magazine cover, advert or similar print text that you haven't seen before. You'll need to write a media analysis of the text using all the media terminology and analysis skills you've built up over two years. Think connotations, CLAMPS, preferred and opposition readings etc.


Magazines
You'll have questions on one of the magazine products:




Section B: Industry and Audience

Film Industry


Newspapers




Paper 1: preparation and revision tasks

Work through the following tasks to help prepare for PPE Paper 1:

1) Work through the Paper 1 revision pack which has example questions, mark schemes and exemplar answers. Focus only on the unseen product questions plus the topics listed above (Magazines, Film Industry, Newspapers).

2) Look back over the blogposts for the topics listed above - plus your own blogposts with all the answers. Create revision cards or knowledge organisers for each CSP and key media terminology (e.g. Mise-en-scene - CLAMPS etc.)

Good luck!

Thursday, 11 March 2021

Coursework: Script for interview with director

The final aspect to our coursework brief is to produce a script for an interview with the director of our low-budget horror film.

With no Covid, we would actually be recording this as a podcast with an interviewer asking questions plus an audio clip from the film itself. Due to the restrictions of lockdown and remote learning, we simply need to write the script for this podcast instead.




What makes a good interview?

The first thing to plan is WHO your director actually is: give them a name, give them a background and perhaps think about an interesting angle. For example, they could be an up-and-coming female director, or from a BAME background - both of which would be unusual in a white, male-dominated film industry. If you don't want to have an interview with the director, you can make it an interview with another member of the production team if you wish.

Plan the questions

Once you've worked out who your director is, you need to think of some questions the interviewer can ask them. You should find that 5-6 questions will be enough as long as you write quite detailed answers. 

Answer the questions in a conversational style

Remember: you're writing a script for a podcast interview. So the writing style can be conversational and quite informal. Make the answers sound like the director is really speaking. In terms of how many words, aim for around 300-400 words in the script in total.

Audio clip from the film

Your script also needs to include a clip from your film - so think about a 10-15 second audio clip which includes music, sound effects and perhaps a line or two of dialogue. Try and get across how scary/creepy/ exciting your film is from the short clip. It's up to you where you put this in your script - it could be at the start, middle or end but make sure the interviewer refers to it. Look at the example below for how this should be laid out.

Images

You need to use at least three images in total across your website so you may want to take an original image of a friend or family member who can 'be' the director being interviewed or perhaps a 'behind the scenes' shot of them with a camera. You could then add this to the website page along with the text of the script.

Who should the interviewer be?

This is up to you - it can be a made-up movie podcast host or alternatively a well-known film critic or journalist working in the industry. E.g. Possible interviewers to interview your Director:

  • Mark Kermode
  • Peter Bradshaw from The Guardian
  • Time Out magazine
  • Den of Geek

What should the final website page look like?

Here's our website example page with the interview with the director. Note how the interview discusses things like representation in the media - if you're aiming for a top grade then the director interview is a great opportunity to show your knowledge of media issues and debates.

Here's another example interview from our technician Daisy's exemplar website for Scream

You may find this Google document structure helps you to write the interview script. You can then copy and paste the text into your website on wix.com. 

The BBC Writers' Room is a brilliant resource with real BBC TV and Radio scripts to read and learn from. For this task, I would focus on the radio scripts as this will help show you how to script a dramatic scene using audio. 

Good luck!

Monday, 1 March 2021

Coursework: website design

Once we have finished our Statement of Intent and taken our photographs, we need to start constructing our website.

This is a fantastic, creative part of the course and best of all you are able to work on this from any computer using the website building site wix.com

For this first lesson in website building we just want to get started on wix.com and choose a template to use for our low-budget independent horror film website.

Create your website using Wix

We're going to use wix.com to create our websites. This is a simple, user-friendly and free site that AQA is happy for us to use and will really help us to create our website. Here's a tutorial explaining the basics in designing a website on wix.com:

Remember, to test out wix.com, we created an example film website using some A Level Media pictures from a different project. This is what we're trying to produce!

Creating a film website on wix.com

To help create your low-budget independent horror film website, we recommend using a film-based template available on wix.com. You can then add your images, film title and other homepage conventions that you researched as part of your first coursework task.

Here's a video walkthrough for how to sign up to wix.com and get your template up and running:


Coursework: Creating a website

This week, we don't have a blog task - we just need to get straight into building our website! Work through the following tasks:

1) Sign up to wix.com using your Greenford email address. Remember: don't pay anything! We can create the website we need for GCSE coursework for free.

2) Select 'Create a new website' and search for a film template for your site.

3) Start to design your site using text and images based on your horror film title and photography.

Good luck!