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MEDIA STUDIES


Media Studies has been taught at Lawrence Sheriff School since 1988 and the Department has enjoyed a spectacular rate of success. Only Maths and Business Studies attract larger numbers of candidates in the sixth form and A Level results have been consistently excellent. In recent years we have added great value to students’ grades with more than 60% of students regularly attaining one of the top two grades at A Level and in 2007 97% of students achieved either an A or B grade.

In our school, Media Studies is a subject strongly driven by current affairs, particularly at A Level. Few aspects of the subject remain constant: it continuously evolves, just as the media themselves are endlessly developing and changing.

What are the Media?

A medium is a form of communication that enables someone with something to say to address an audience that is out of immediate earshot. Media Studies examines the role played by the mass media – those media that are used to address audiences running into thousands, or millions – in our lives. For examination purposes at Lawrence Sheriff School, the mass media are deemed to be:

Television
Radio
Newspapers
Magazines
Film
Video/DVD
Advertising
Popular Music
The Internet

Not all of these media are studied in equal depth: at Lawrence Sheriff we pay closer attention to television, advertising and film as these are the areas that engage, motivate and interest our students. However, all areas of the media are explored, and in examinations students may be asked to analyse and evaluate unseen texts from any of them.

 

Why Study the Media?

On average, every person in the country spends more than 24 hours a week – a fifth of the time we spend awake – watching television. Most of us devote several further hours to listening to the radio, or visiting the cinema, or reading newspapers and magazines, to say nothing of the increasing amount of time that many people spend on the Internet. Shouldn’t we know a lot more about these forms of communication which occupy so many of our waking hours and influence our attitudes and behaviour?

Much of the time people tend to watch, listen, read and surf in a largely uncritical fashion, regarding our use of the mass media primarily as relaxation. Yet they are much more important to us than mere entertainment. We use them as our primary source for a vast amount of the knowledge and understanding we have of the world in general and the society in which we live: they are vitally important to us as our means of knowing what is going on outside our own personal experience, and understanding the way in which we should conduct our lives. But are they reliable? Are the versions of events which they present fair, accurate and impartial?

Most people don’t stop to think about these things. We tend to believe what we see or hear on the evening news, or read in the ‘quality’ Press, even if we are clever enough not to believe all that is published in the tabloids; we tend to assume that the version of the world presented by Eastenders or Coronation Street is ‘real’ and we care about the characters as if they truly existed. We could easily be persuaded that the stars of popular music, TV and film are actually like the images that have been constructed for them.  We may think that by ‘speaking’ to someone in Iraq, Zimbabwe or China on the Internet we can get a truly accurate picture of what is going on in his or her country. Should we be so trusting?

Those who control and own the mass media, as well as broadcasters, journalists, politicians, spin-doctors, marketing men and advertisers, understand all of this and can, and do, exploit our trusting, credulous natures everyday of our lives.

 

The Aims

We have six principal aims specific to the subject:

• To develop in our students a critical awareness of the role the mass media (especially television, radio, film, newspaper and advertising) play in our lives, and their impact on the world in which we live;

• To make informed personal judgements about the mass media and those who own, regulate and produce them;

• To develop in our students a range of basic media production skills, both technical and creative;

• To teach our students to read media texts with insight and critical understanding;

• To encourage our students to learn to think for themselves, especially over political, social and moral issues;

• To encourage our students to seek out and appreciate journalism, broadcasting and films of the highest quality.

We also pursue a range of broader aims, related to self-expression, self-supported study and citizenship, at all times encouraging our students:

• To express themselves clearly and accurately, whatever the context;

• To be conscious of audience and consequently to use appropriate language and registers, particularly in production work;

• To make the most effective use of ICT whenever it is appropriate to do so;

• To work independently, making effective use of what they discover from personal research;

• To be open-minded, and to be both tolerant and respectful of the views and values of others;

• To make, and value, judgements that are based on evidence, not prejudice;

• To value objectivity, independence and impartiality as cornerstones of democracy.

 

What are the main areas of Study?

We concern ourselves with nine principal aspects of the mass media:

Textual creativity – how media texts are constructed

Production – how media products are made, and the influences upon this of economics and changes in technology

Genre – how texts are classified according to their content and the distinguishing characteristics of each type

Ownership – who controls the media, and more importantly, determines the nature of their content

Audiences – how audiences are constructed and targeted by people in the media industries, and the ways in which audiences use, and respond to, the media

Representation – the ways in which political, ethical and social issues are portrayed, and the ways in which the media deal with groups of people defined by such factors as age, gender, race and occupation

Regulation – how the various media are controlled, both by Acts of Parliament and through codes of practice set up by official regulatory bodies, as well less formal influences such as public opinion

Languages – the register, style and lexis employed in individual media products; the jargon of media production; and the specialised terminology of critical analysis

History – those aspects of the way in which the media have developed over the years where such study helps students to reach an informed understanding of the present.

 

How is our Teaching Structured?

GCSE

As part of Lawrence Sheriff’s commitment to personalised learning, students are now offered a challenging 3 year course that begins in year 9 and involves the study of both Media and Film. Students will study GCSE Media in years 9 and 10 and will then go on to study AS Film Studies in year 11. At the end of the three years students will have achieved 2 qualifications.

Sixth Form

At AS Level, the numbers choosing the subject typically range between 40 and 60 students. These are divided into two or three sets, each set containing, ideally, no more than 24 members. The teaching of each set is divided equally between two teachers. Between a third and a half of the students who opt for Media Studies in the sixth form are girls from Rugby High School.

The vast majority of those who complete the AS Level continue with the subject in the Upper Sixth. Once again, the teaching of each set is shared equally between two teachers.


   


 

Lawrence Sheriff School, Clifton Road, RUGBY CV21 3AG

Tel: 01788 542074 or 01788 843700
Fax: 01788 567962
lss@lawrencesheriffschool.com

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