Movies for Kids Project

 

 

 

Choose an animated movie that has been advertised for children (e.g. The Little Mermaid, Shrek, Up, Kung Fu Panda). This assignment will require you to analyze the movie for developmental concepts and create a poster to explain.
Watch the film and look for developmental concepts. The concepts can be things the characters are experiencing. In the example poster (see accompanying PowerPoint), I used Inside Out, Riley is an adolescent, and displays development appropriate for her age. You could also look for concepts that the viewer might be learning. Is the movie teaching concepts that are (or are not) developmentally appropriate for the target viewer?
Some concepts you might consider: language development, emotion regulation, scaffolding and zone of proximal development, egocentrism, motor skills., identity development, parenting styles, attachment, nature vs. nurture, Piaget’s stages (sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete operations, formal operations). You can use concepts not on this list. If you are unsure, use the worksheets at the end of this document and we can workshop your ideas.
For each concept, explain the concept. Use information learned in class and include theories or terms (e.g. Erikson’s identity vs. role confusion.) as appropriate. Underline these explanations. For each concept provide 1-3 examples of where the concept is demonstrated in the movie.
I also want you to think about what age the movie is appropriate for. Think about what kids are ready to understand and give a reason for why you think this is the ideal age or age range for the movie (Example: Many Disney movies have the death of a parent, which may be distressing for kids in Early Childhood ages 2-6. Kids in this stage may be scared and have trouble emotionally regulating. They may also have a hard time separating the fantasy of the movie from reality which could cause distress if they are worried that their parent may also die.).
Please provide a few images. It should also support the text. Don’t just use the movie poster or a picture of the main characters.
All information should go in ONE PowerPoint slide. Font size should be 9point or larger.
If you use sources other than the textbook or class lectures, please put each citation or link on a separate line in the “notes” of the PowerPoint. (I used Common Sense Media as supporting material; see my PowerPoint Poster example).

Poster Presentation Rubric:
• Provide a brief summary of the movie 3 points

• What age (or age range) is this movie appropriate for? 2 points
o Why? 5 points

• THREE developmental concepts that are shown in the movie? 30 points
o Explain the concept
o Provide example(s) of where you see the concept in the movie.

• Presentation included at least one visual component 5 points
o Images should support a point you are making

• Present Poster in ~5 minutes. 5 points
o You give a very brief introduction and explain in more detail 1-2 concepts.

See PowerPoint to read text. You may also use the PowerPoint as a template, or make your own.

Movie Project Planning Worksheet
Part 1
1. Movie Title
2. Movie Summary
3. Age
4. Developmental Concepts
a. _________________
b. _________________
c. _________________
5. Other notes
Part 2
1. Why age?
a. Reason/example
b. Reason/example (optional)
2. Concept 1 __________________
a. Define
b. Supporting information
c. Example 1
d. Example 2 (optional)
e. Example 3 (optional)
3. Concept 2 __________________
a. Define
b. Supporting information
c. Example 1
d. Example 2 (optional)
e. Example 3 (optional)
4. Concept 3 __________________
a. Define
b. Supporting information
c. Example 1
d. Example 2 (optional)
e. Example 3 (optional)
5. Image list
Part 3
1. Draft poster
a. Copy in text
b. Add images
c. Work on initial placement and visual aesthetic
2. Edit Poster
a. Edit text
b. Move words and images so that the flow of the poster is easy to read
c. Check for underlining of key terms
d. Add sources/citation to Notes

 

 

 

 

 

Sample Solution

Can feminism be viewed as a viable school of thought that can be relied upon? What can be considered as a main obstacle in giving feminism a greater force is masculinity. The subject of feminism is about women and appears to concern itself with the political, social and cultural experiences of women. Where do we fit the male in this debate, masculinity therefore, is a hindrance to feminism. As long as we associate masculinity or femininity with history and culture it cannot be deemed worthy or relevant as a practice or attitude for feminist use. The position of women is regressing. Perhaps not legislatively, but socially. The reasons for which does not include men. It was not men who ‘voluntarily stampeded towards the creeping tyranny of needless plastic surgery and a pathological obsession with grooming.’ In her book, Enlightened Sexism: The Seductive Message that Feminism’s Work is Done, Susan B. Douglas explains that ‘The dumb blond, narcissistic ‘real housewives,’ cat-fighting, wedding obsessed, baby-obsessed stereotypes in the media mask and justify this inequality, as does the relentless blitzkrieg against women with power by the pit bulls of talk radio and cable TV news.’ So the question arises, is feminism dead? Is this a postfeminist era? In her book, ‘The Future of Feminism’, Sylvia Walby disagrees with this notion. She substantiates her stance with evidence of contemporary feminism. She rightfully suggests that feminist projects are not always labelled as feminist. The book illustrates the future of feminism as a global wave, on this future depends the future of gender inequality and social inequality in general. Conclusion ‘Feminism is hated, because women are hated. Anti-feminism is a direct expression of misogyny; it is the political defence of women hating.’ Perhaps it is the extent of Andrea Dworkin’s statement suggests that leads one to believe that this was only applicable in the past and has no relevance to the present. However, as long as there exists a group of people who think it shameful to be called a feminist, this quote will seem to be true. In this essay, we have seen how the legal system has contributed to the prevalent gender inequality and how it remains androcentric to this day. We might not see the day that the entire legal system can be called a feminist system, however th

This question has been answered.

Get Answer
WeCreativez WhatsApp Support
Our customer support team is here to answer your questions. Ask us anything!
👋 Hi, Welcome to Compliant Papers.