The Ten Tools have been designed especially with teachers new to film in mind, to provide an easy route into the exploration of moving images in the classroom. They are not prescriptive, but rather should be used selectively and in combinations to suit you. In time you will get to know which of them will work best with any film text you choose.
One of the things we do as readers of any kind of text, is that we immediately start making predictions about the content, the message, the audience, the writer’s aims and so on, and we do this by making inferences from the evidence in front of us.
If you are reading a poem, short story or a novel, you might talk about the title, the cover, the blurb and the illustrations if there are any. Learners discuss the sort of text they are about to read.
You can use the same kinds of activities before viewing a film, and at various points in the text. This can be done using the cover of the DVD, or a trailer, or the opening of the film. At key points in the text the Freeze Frame, Shots-in-Sequence or Sound & Image tools can be used to discuss what might happen next, or how it might end. As readers improve their skills, and become more aware of the conventions of genre and narrative, they become more confident in weighing up likely and unlikely outcomes, and in identifying the textual evidence for their predictions.
Sound is a fundamental element of moving image texts, and one whose significance is often overlooked (it is even ignored in the term ‘moving image text’!). Sound – particularly music – can set the mood of a text, it can signify genre, and it can often be more powerful than the visual images. In addition to its emotive force, the soundtrack often carries a huge amount of narrative information, absorbed subliminally by the viewer/listener. Sound can affect not only the way viewers interpret the images and how they feel about story events, but also what they think they actually see.
A number of techniques can be used to develop an understanding of the relationship between sound and image in moving image texts
This exercise can also work effectively in reverse by playing a sequence without the sound, and asking learners to suggest, or create, a suitable soundtrack.
How would you describe this music?
How would the sequence be affected if it was a different kind of music?
What can you tell about the speakers from their voices? accent? tone?
Do the sound transitions in this sequence match the shot transitions? (In drama they may anticipate them, heightening the suspense)
Choose a short silent text and create an appropriate soundtrack (there are numerous silent films on the Scotland on Screen website)
Using the pause button on the media player allows the learner to focus on particular shots in the text (and also to appreciate that each shot is made up of a series of still images). By examining such things as the angle, distance and movement of the camera, and the use of lighting and colour, the reader can learn how every element of a visual image can carry meaning, and how visual images can be ‘read’ like any other text.
This tool is used along with Freeze Frame to focus on a particular sequence of shots in a moving image text. Readers may be asked to estimate the number of shots after viewing a short sequence, or to note each change in shot, location or sound.
Readers come to appreciate that the number, sequence and duration of shots in a moving image text are created in the editing process, and that screen time and story time are usually different.
This tool can also be used to examine shot transitions (e.g. cut, dissolve, fade) and how the type of transition affects the meaning. The types of transitions used and the length of shots help determine pace, and contribute to the meaning. Sound transitions do not always coincide with shot transitions: in dramatic texts they often anticipate them to create suspense or alter the mood.
On the storyboard template, and using the pause on the media player, get your group to 'transcribe' a short sequence from a film (6-20 shots) by drawing each shot, copying each one off the screen one by one, and annotating afterwards with notes on sound and action - Use this to discuss the sequence:
This may seem like an obvious strategy, since as teachers we do it all the time, but we are talking here about student-generated questions! The key idea is that we develop an understanding in the learner that asking questions is probably more important than answering them. This is a core strategy in the development of critical thinkers, and we need to guide learners towards the hierarchy of questions they should be asking as they read a text (see Bloom’s Digital Taxonomy). Questions generally fall into one of three categories - LITERAL, INFERENTIAL or EVALUATIVE – and we need to ensure that student questioning develops beyond the literal stage.
One simple but effective way of developing these critical skills is to use the ‘Tell Me’ grids (see Appendix) during the viewing of a moving image text. These allow readers to focus on specific aspects of the text and record the questions which naturally occur to them (these grids were developed by the writer Aidan Chambers in his book Tell Me
When we read a text we are constantly (and sub-consciously) making associations between what we are reading and other experiences: other things we have read/seen/heard/watched, and our own real-life experiences. Or, to put that another way, we are drawing on our prior learning.
In order to develop that in young readers we can encourage them to make those links explicit and explore those aspects of the text which are most likely to elicit the comparisons. It is also important to explore the notion that, while viewing the text will often be a shared experience, our reactions to it may be quite different, depending on the associations we make.
By comparing and contrasting texts they have read, the sophisticated reader begins to show a deeper understanding of genre, or of the work of a particular writer, director, culture or historical period. Identifying recurring motifs within a text can help illuminate the text as a whole, and you can look for them in the soundtrack, the images, and in story events.
Patterns can be found in elements of the plot, or the repeated use of a certain colour or symbol, of types of lighting, of camera angles, shots or movements, of shot sequences or transitions. They can also be found in the soundtrack of course, in particular musical motifs or instruments, or sound effects - Sound and Image is an extremely effective tool for identifying these.
Using Freeze Frame or Shots in Sequence can also make learners more aware of patterns, by separating the shots in a sequence and looking in detail at narration.
Visualisation, or the interpretation of a printed text into internal images, is a natural process for trained readers, but the link needs to be made explicit for a developing reader. Asking learners to draw a character or a scene from a printed text allows them to present their unique interpretation of the text. Using graphic organisers such as Mind-Maps can be a very effective way of making sense of a text, summarising key elements, committing to memory or sharing with others, while storyboards or comic-book software make the creation of narrative easier and more fun.
In the same way, learners can often develop a better understanding of moving image texts by ‘translating’ them into a print genre such as a poem, short story, diary entry or newspaper item, or by adapting and ‘audio-visualising’ a short written text into a storyboard.
The ability to summarise is an essential skill for the developing fluent-comprehending reader, but it is also a highly sophisticated skill which needs to be modelled repeatedly by the teacher. It is another of those aspects of reading which sophisticated readers take for granted: as we progress through a text we are sub-consciously assimilating and synthesising each new piece of information into a constantly updated summary of the whole.
There are a number of ways in which the ability to summarise effectively can be developed in learners. Writing or making a trailer for a film can be an effective way of making an accurate ‘summary’ of the whole text, whether it’s in the form of a ‘sound-only’ trailer for radio, a poster of the key elements, or a selected edit of shots from the original with appropriate voiceover (the films on Scotland on Screen website allow for download and edit through GLOW and are ideal for this purpose).
This tool will be used to a greater or lesser extent on every text, and it is one aspect of reading which rarely has to be encouraged. However, the process of evaluating or assessing the worth of a text is often the least considered or developed. Readers of any age will happily tell you what they think of a text, but will often struggle to explain why, beyond the stock responses of “it was boring” or “it was exciting”.
When engaged in this strategy, therefore, it is the quality of the discussion and the use of open questions which will determine the quality of the outcome. It is also important that in any evaluation, the criteria for success are shared and agreed, and these will usually be related to audience and purpose. An appropriate vocabulary needs to be developed over time.