Using Film in the Classroom/How to Read a Film

CONTENTS OF CURRICULUM UNIT 15.04.04

  1. Unit Guide
  1. Introduction
  2. Rationale
  3. Content Objectives
  4. Enduring Understandings
  5. Essential Questions
  6. Teaching Strategies
  7. Lesson Plans
  8. Resources
  9. Appendix
  10. Notes

Film Analysis and Contemporary Issues: The Surveillance State

Eric W. Maroney

Published September 2015

Tools for this Unit:

Guide Entry to 15.04.04

This curriculum unit makes use film to build and enhance students’ analytical reading and writing skills. Throughout the unit, students will identify and analyze the cinematic tools and choices a director employs to create meaning. This analysis will mirror the same close reading skills described in the Common Core State Standards (CCSS), which are the same practices students engage in when deconstructing traditional literature or written text. . Film replaces written text providing an alterative medium for students to engage with. This substitution is intended to remove the barrier of decoding; thus, allowing students access to complex texts and ideas. Thematically, the unit explores the ethics of surveillance. Students will examine The Conversation (1974), Eagle Eye (2008) and Citizenfour (2014) to consider the ideologies these texts produce regarding surveillance and the evolution of surveillance technology. Students will explore the ways viewers are encouraged or discouraged to identify with particular characters and consider the way this spectator identification constructs the messaged agenda of the film. At the culmination of the unit, students will write a comparative analysis on two of the texts studied throughout the unit.

(Developed for English IV, grade 12; recommended for English and Civics, grades 9-12)

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