A Role for Film in Writing Pedagogy

Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === This thesis discusses the use of film in the composition classroom. It is divided into four chapters: The Argument, The Audience, Film as a Pedagogical Tool, and The Future. Chapter One (the Argument) discusses the different ideas about u...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wieland, John A.
Other Authors: Fox, Stephen L.
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1805/2105
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spelling ndltd-IUPUI-oai-scholarworks.iupui.edu-1805-21052019-05-10T15:20:55Z A Role for Film in Writing Pedagogy Wieland, John A. Fox, Stephen L. Di Camilla, Frederick J. Davis, Ken, 1945- Using film to teach writing Composition (Language arts) -- Study and teaching Motion pictures in education Teaching -- Aids and devices Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) This thesis discusses the use of film in the composition classroom. It is divided into four chapters: The Argument, The Audience, Film as a Pedagogical Tool, and The Future. Chapter One (the Argument) discusses the different ideas about using media in the classroom, and how it is good practice to do so. New ideas on teaching from education expert Ken Bain (What the Best College Teachers Do) are presented. Bain suggests that as long as the instructor is confident in his or her subject, any innovative thing they do in class is all right. Malcolm Gladwell’s ideas from The Tipping Point are applied to the classroom: the Law of the Few, Connectors, Mavens, Salesmen, the Stickiness Factor, and the Power of Context. Presentations couched within a Gladwell frame can prove to be extraordinarily effective. Chapter Two (the Audience) analyzes the Millennial students, and discusses their views on learning and media. These students see learning as a commodity and view modern media with a bit of contempt. Therefore, to use media in the classroom the instructor must be innovative. Chapter Three (Film as a Pedagogical Tool) examines various different applications of film use in the classroom. It also looks in depth at using David Mamet’s films in the classroom, especially Glengarry Glen Ross, The Edge, and The Verdict, which use classical structure to persuade and argue. Chapter Four (The Future) looks at the work of Howard Gardner and his theory five minds: the Disciplined Mind, the Synthesizing Mind, the Creative Mind, the Respectful Mind, and the Ethical Mind and how we must prepare to teach to them all. In the conclusion I posit that the students of today and the students of tomorrow will require new and innovative techniques to be taught effectively, and that film is versatile and flexible enough to do it. 2010-02-26T19:50:39Z 2010-02-26T19:50:39Z 2010-02-26T19:50:39Z Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1805/2105
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Using film to teach writing
Composition (Language arts) -- Study and teaching
Motion pictures in education
Teaching -- Aids and devices
spellingShingle Using film to teach writing
Composition (Language arts) -- Study and teaching
Motion pictures in education
Teaching -- Aids and devices
Wieland, John A.
A Role for Film in Writing Pedagogy
description Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === This thesis discusses the use of film in the composition classroom. It is divided into four chapters: The Argument, The Audience, Film as a Pedagogical Tool, and The Future. Chapter One (the Argument) discusses the different ideas about using media in the classroom, and how it is good practice to do so. New ideas on teaching from education expert Ken Bain (What the Best College Teachers Do) are presented. Bain suggests that as long as the instructor is confident in his or her subject, any innovative thing they do in class is all right. Malcolm Gladwell’s ideas from The Tipping Point are applied to the classroom: the Law of the Few, Connectors, Mavens, Salesmen, the Stickiness Factor, and the Power of Context. Presentations couched within a Gladwell frame can prove to be extraordinarily effective. Chapter Two (the Audience) analyzes the Millennial students, and discusses their views on learning and media. These students see learning as a commodity and view modern media with a bit of contempt. Therefore, to use media in the classroom the instructor must be innovative. Chapter Three (Film as a Pedagogical Tool) examines various different applications of film use in the classroom. It also looks in depth at using David Mamet’s films in the classroom, especially Glengarry Glen Ross, The Edge, and The Verdict, which use classical structure to persuade and argue. Chapter Four (The Future) looks at the work of Howard Gardner and his theory five minds: the Disciplined Mind, the Synthesizing Mind, the Creative Mind, the Respectful Mind, and the Ethical Mind and how we must prepare to teach to them all. In the conclusion I posit that the students of today and the students of tomorrow will require new and innovative techniques to be taught effectively, and that film is versatile and flexible enough to do it.
author2 Fox, Stephen L.
author_facet Fox, Stephen L.
Wieland, John A.
author Wieland, John A.
author_sort Wieland, John A.
title A Role for Film in Writing Pedagogy
title_short A Role for Film in Writing Pedagogy
title_full A Role for Film in Writing Pedagogy
title_fullStr A Role for Film in Writing Pedagogy
title_full_unstemmed A Role for Film in Writing Pedagogy
title_sort role for film in writing pedagogy
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1805/2105
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