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The days of needing to enter a Cinemaplex to watch a movie are gone with the wind. All we need do is turn on our laptop computers or mobile devices and a world of streaming media awaits us. And out of the more than seven hours a day that the average youth spends using media, 50 percent is exclusively devoted to film and television.
Social studies professors and authors William Benedict Russell III and Stewart Waters note in their book Reel Character Education: A Cinematic Approach to Character Development that film plays a significant role in our lives and pop culture, often provoking meaningful inquiry regarding social issues, personal values, and moral dilemmas. Thus, film can serve as a powerful teaching tool to assist youth, in particular, in developing various character strengths and making positive decisions.
Exactly what power do these visual images possess?
In many instances, film can function like a mirror, reflecting society and showing life with more focus and clarity. The characters depicted help us to better understand what truly motivates us and what the results of our actions might be depending on the choices that we make. Films assist us in learning how to understand and critique our culture, asking questions about who we are, where we come from, and what we should do. And films can both incite discussion and create a social impact, sometimes giving us a specific call to action.
When approaching the use of film in the classroom to teach character traits, Russell and Waters present us with three models:
In my work as a film and social-emotional learning instructor, I have taken elements of each of these models and created a general outline that I follow when creating my lesson plans:
I begin by viewing the film ahead of time and noting specific questions (PDF) related to both the character virtue and the film.
I introduce the character virtue, and the students share their current understanding of what that virtue is, offer examples of how it can be practiced, and discuss its importance to their own lives and to the society in which we live.
My preference is to show students the entire film, as I think it's important for them to see the story arc of the characters. I want my students to see not only what choices the characters made, but also why they made them. If time restricts our ability to view the entire film, then I will use clips from the beginning, middle, and end of to illustrate the progression of the characters' journeys.
After viewing the film, I have students reflect on what they learned about the character virtues through the characters' actions. This discussion connects easily to their ideas about how they might apply these lessons to their own life situations.
In an attempt to help my students literally put their feet in the shoes of the characters, I have them engage in dramatic role-playing skits:
What are some good films to view? Check out my full list of suggested filmsby grade level. And in the comments section below, please tell us how you use film with your students, and the benefits you observe.
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Hey, y'all...
I'm going to use this in my Brit Lit class for a comparison in our understanding of Rochester and Jane's characters in Jane Eyre. I plan to show the Bertha discovery scene from the newest film version. Then in the second part of class we will work with the "Madwoman in the Attic" article by Gilbert and Gruber. I will use selections from the articles as group reading and notation work; then class will develop discussion questions for the next class. (This is 80min block)
Later I may show the Ciaran Hinds version of the same scene as I had my students watch three version of the Queen's Speech Before the Armada to consider which version seems to contain a "Warrior queen."
Robert B. Vellani, PhD
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