The index, as you know, is a critical way of making sure you are keeping on top of the workload and not missing any crucial topics or concepts. Your December index should have the following work in it:
1) Introduction to Media: 10 questions
2) Media consumption audit
3) Semiotics blog tasks - English analysis and Icon, Index, Symbol
4) Language: Reading an image - advert analyses
5) Reception theory - advert analyses part 2
6) Genre: Factsheets and genre study questions
7) Blog feedback and learner response
8) Narrative: Factsheet questions
9) Audience: classification - psychographics presentation notes
10) October assessment learner response
12) Audience theory 1 - Hypodermic needle/Two-step flow/U&G
11) Audience theory 2 - The effects debate - Bandura, Cohen
12) Industries: Ownership and Control
13) Industries: Hesmondhalgh - The Cultural Industries
14) Industries: Public Service Broadcasting
15) Industries: Regulation
Remember, your index needs to link to YOUR blogpost for each piece of work. If you've missed anything, catch up with it over Christmas and make sure the index is up-to-date before you come back in January.
January assessment details
This assessment will be in the first week back and will be similar in format to your October assessment. Revise everything from your two indexes - MIGRAIN Introduction to Media and Film & TV Language. In addition, look over your learner response for the assessment in October. That feedback will be important in identifying how you will improve in the upcoming assessment.
Christmas homework: revise for January assessment
Your Christmas homework is simple: revise everything you've learned so far in Media this year for your January assessment.
In addition, there are plenty of resources out there to further help you prepare for your January assessment. For example, we strongly recommend you get hold of the two A Level Media textbooks endorsed by AQA which cover all the key concepts and many of the Close-Study Products.
You will obviously be looking over your MIGRAIN index as outlined above. However, there is plenty more out there. Anything you read in our Media Magazine archive will help to give you a wider perspective on media debates and every issue has several articles which focus on interesting examples, theories and debates that will help you in a Media exam. You'll find our Media Magazine archive here.
Remember: these resources are all for you - the more you use them, the better you will do!
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