Outcome Chart - British Columbia - English Language Arts - New Media 10
New Media 10 is a program of studies designed to reflect the changing role of technology in today’s society and the increasing importance of digital media in communicating and exchanging ideas. This course is intended to allow students and educators the flexibility to develop a program of study centred on students’ interests, needs, and abilities, while at the same time allowing for a range of local delivery methods. New Media 10 recognizes that digital literacy is an essential characteristic of the educated citizen. Coursework is aimed at providing students with a set of skills vital for success in an increasingly complex digital world by affording opportunities to demonstrate understanding and communicate ideas through a variety of digital and print media. New Media 10 explores tasks and texts designed to introduce students to the study of new media.
The following are possible focus areas in New Media 10:
- Media and film studies—suggested content/topics include the globalization of the media industry, influence of media on users’ perceptions, documentaries in the age of digital media, the rise of social media
- Journalism and publishing—suggested content/topics include the changing roles and structures within news organizations; risks, challenges, and opportunities associated with professional journalism; and citizen journalism, local journalism, school-based journalism
- Digital communication—suggested content/topics include blogging, writing for the web, writing for social media, gaming, and podcasting
Curricular Competencies
Using oral, written, visual, and digital texts, students are expected individually and collaboratively to be able to:
Comprehend and connect (reading, listening, viewing)
- Recognize the complexities of digital citizenship
- Read for enjoyment and to achieve personal goals
- Access information for diverse purposes and from a variety of sources to inform writing
- Explore the relevance, accuracy, and reliability of texts
- Apply appropriate strategies to comprehend written, oral, visual, and multimodal texts
- Recognize and appreciate how different forms, formats, structures, and features of texts enhance and shape meaning and impact
- Think critically, creatively, and reflectively to explore ideas within, between, and beyond texts
- Explore how language constructs personal and social identities
- Construct meaningful personal connections between self, text, and world
- Identify bias, contradictions, and distortions
Create and communicate (writing, speaking, representing)
- Respectfully exchange ideas and viewpoints from diverse perspectives to build shared understanding and extend thinking
- Respond to text in personal, creative, and critical ways
- Assess and refine texts to improve clarity and impact
- Demonstrate speaking and listening skills in a variety of formal and informal contexts for a range of purposes
- Use writing and design processes to plan, develop, and create engaging and meaningful texts for a variety of purposes and audiences
- Use digital media to collaborate and communicate both within the classroom and beyond its walls
- Express and support an opinion with evidence
- Use the conventions of Canadian spelling, grammar, and punctuation proficiently and as appropriate to the context
- Use acknowledgements and citations to recognize intellectual property rights
- Transform ideas and information to create original texts
MediaSmarts Resources
- Authentication Beyond the Classroom
- Beyond Media Messages: Media Portrayal of Global Development
- Bias and Crime in Media
- Bias in News Sources
- Challenging Hate Online
- Cyberbullying and the Law
- Deconstructing Web Pages
- Digital Outreach for Civic Engagement
- Digital Storytelling for Civic Engagement
- Finding and Authenticating Online Information on Global Development Issues
- First Person
- First, Do No Harm: Being an Active Witness to Cyberbullying
- Free Speech and the Internet
- Gambling in the Media
- Gender Messages in Alcohol Advertising
- Hate 2.0
- Hate or Debate
- Hoax? Scholarly Research? Personal Opinion? You Decide!
- Introduction to Online Civic Engagement
- Marketing to Teens: Alternate Ads
- Marketing to Teens: Gender Roles in Advertising
- Marketing to Teens: Gotta Have It! Designer & Brand Names
- Marketing to Teens: Marketing Tactics
- Marketing to Teens: Parody Ads - Lesson
- Marketing to Teens: Talking Back
- My Voice is Louder Than Hate: The Impact of Hate
- My Voice is Louder Than Hate: Pushing Back Against Hate
- Online Propaganda and the Proliferation of Hate
- Online Relationships: Respect and Consent
- Perceptions of Youth and Crime
- Reality Check: News You Can Use
- Relationships and Sexuality in the Media
- Remixing Media
- Shaking the Movers: Youth Rights and Media
- The Citizen Reporter
- Thinking about Hate
- Unpacking Privilege
- Watching the Elections
Content
Students are expected to know the following:
Text forms and genres
Text features and structures
- interactivity
- features of multimodal texts
Strategies and processes
- reading strategies
- oral language strategies
- metacognitive strategies
- writing processes
- new media design processes
- multimedia presentation processes
MediaSmarts Resources
- Authentication Beyond the Classroom
- Challenging Hate Online
- First Person
- Free Speech and the Internet
- Hate 2.0
- Break the Fake: Hoax? Scholarly Research? Personal Opinion? You Decide!
- Remixing Media
- The Citizen Reporter