Outcome Chart - Ontario - English 11 College Preparation
This outcome chart contains media education learning outcomes from the Ontario, Curriculum for English, Grade 11, with links to supporting resources on the MediaSmarts site.
It is expected that students will:
Understanding Media Texts
- explain how elements in increasingly complex or difficult media texts are designed to suit particular purposes and/or audiences
- interpret media texts, including increasingly complex texts, identifying and explaining the overt and implied messages they convey
- evaluate how effectively information, ideas, issues, and opinions are communicated in media texts, including increasingly complex texts, and decide whether the texts achieve their intended purpose
- explain why the same media text might prompt different responses from different audiences
- identify the perspectives and/or biases evident in media texts, including increasingly complex texts, and comment on any questions they may raise about beliefs, values, identity, and power
- explain how a variety of production, marketing, and distribution factors influence the media industry
MediaSmarts Resources
- Advertising and Male Violence
- Alternative Ads
- Crime in the News
- Don’t Drink and Drive: Assessing the Effectiveness of Anti-Drinking Campaigns
- Gender Roles in Advertising
- Gotta Have It! Designer & Brand Names
- Hoax? Scholarly Research? Personal Opinion? You Decide!
- Kellogg Special K Ads
- Marketing Tactics
- Sex in Advertising
- Suffragettes and Iron Ladies
- Marketing to Teens: Talking Back
- The Pornography Debate: Controversy in Advertising
- The Price of Happiness: On Advertising, Image, and Self Esteem
Understanding Media Forms, Conventions, and Techniques
- identify several general and specific characteristics of a variety of media forms and explain how they shape content and create meaning
- identify conventions and/or techniques that are used in different media forms and analyse and explain how they convey meaning and influence their audience
MediaSmarts Resources
- Challenging Hate
- Free Speech vs the Internet
- Hoax? Scholarly Research? Personal Opinion? You Decide!
- Perceptions of Youth and Crime
- Political Cartoons
- Popular Music and Music Videos
- Sex in Advertising
- The Blockbuster Movie
- Thinking About Hate
Marketing to Teens series:
Creating Media Texts
describe the topic, purpose, and audience for media texts they plan to create and identify significant challenges they may face in achieving their purpose
select a media form to suit the topic, purpose, and audience for a media text they plan to create and explain why it is a appropriate choice
identify a variety of conventions and/or techniques appropriate to a media form they plan to use , and explain how these will help communicate specific aspects of their intended meaningproduce media texts for a variety of purposes and audiences, using appropriate forms, conventions, and techniques
MediaSmarts Resources
- Bias in the News
- Gotta Have It! Designer & Brand Names
- Television Broadcast Ratings
- The Blockbuster Movie
- The Front Page
- The Pornography Debate
- The Price of Happiness
- The Privacy Dilemma
- Violence on Film
Reading for Meaning
Read and demonstrate an understanding of a variety of literary, graphic, and informational texts, using a range of strategies to construct meaning
- Read a variety of short, contemporary student- and teacher-selected texts from diverse cultures, identifying specific purposes for reading
- select and use appropriate reading comprehension strategies before, during, and after reading to understand texts, including increasingly complex texts
- Identify the most important ideas and supporting details in texts, including increasingly complex texts
- explain how authors and editors use design elements to organize content and communicate ideas
- Make and explain inferences about texts, including increasingly complex texts, supporting their explanations with well-chosen stated and implied ideas from the texts
- Extend understanding of texts, including increasingly complex texts, by making appropriate connections between the ideas in them and personal knowledge, experience, and insights, other texts, and the world around them
- Analyse the information, ideas, issues, and themes explored in texts and tbe ways in which various aspects of the texts contribute to their development
- Evaluate the effectiveness of texts, including increasingly complex texts, stating their opinions clearly and using evidence from the text to support their opinions
- Identify and analyse the perspectives and/or biases evident in texts, including increasingly complex texts, and comment on any questions they may raise about beliefs, values, identity, and power
MediaSmarts Resources
News Journalism
Music
Stereotyping
Television
Understanding Form and Style
Recognize a variety of text forms, text features, and stylistic elements and demonstrate understanding of how they help communicate meaning
- identify a variety of characteristics of informational, literary, and graphic text forms and explain how they help communicate meaning
- Identify a variety of text features and explain how they help communicate meaning
- Identify a variety of elements of style in texts, including increasingly complex texts, and explain how they help communicate meaning and enhance the effectiveness of the texts
MediaSmarts Resources
- Advertising and Male Violence
- Beyond Media Messages: Media Portrayal of Global Development
- Bias and Crime in Media
- Bias in News Sources
- Body Positive Ads
- Break the Fake: Hoax? Scholarly Research? Personal Opinion? You Decide!
- Buy Nothing Day
- Camera Shots
- Celebrities and World Issues
- Crime in the News
- Dealing with Digital Stress
- Digital Outreach for Civic Engagement
- Digital Storytelling for Civic Engagement
- Don’t Drink and Drive: Assessing the Effectiveness of Anti-Drinking Campaigns
- First Person
- First, Do No Harm: Being an Active Witness to Cyberbullying
- Images of Learning
- Making Media for Democratic Citizenship
- Marketing to Teens: Alternate Ads
- Marketing to Teens: Gotta Have It! Designer & Brand Names
- Marketing to Teens: Marketing Tactics
- Marketing to Teens: Talking Back
- Miscast and Seldom Seen
- Online Cultures and Values
- Online Propaganda and the Proliferation of Hate
- Political Cartoons
- Popular Music and Music Videos
- Privacy Rights of Children and Teens
- Reality Check: Authentication 101
- Reality Check: We Are All Broadcasters
- Relationships and Sexuality in the Media
- Secure Comics
- Sex in Advertising
- Suffragettes and Iron Ladies
- The Blockbuster Movie
- The Citizen Reporter
- The Front Page
- The Pornography Debate: Controversy in Advertising
- The Price of Happiness
- There's No Excuse: Confronting Moral Disengagement in Sexting
- Watching the Elections
- Your Online Resume
Reflecting on Media Literacy Skills and Strategies
- describe a variety of strategies they used in interpreting and creating media texts, explain which ones they found most helpful, and identify appropriate steps they can take to improve as media interpreters and producers
- explain how their skills in listening, speaking, reading, and writing help them interpret and produce media texts
MediaSmarts Resources
- Advertising and Male Violence
- Beyond Media Messages: Media Portrayal of Global Development
- Bias and Crime in Media
- Bias in News Sources
- Body Positive Ads
- Break the Fake: Hoax? Scholarly Research? Personal Opinion? You Decide!
- Buy Nothing Day
- Camera Shots
- Celebrities and World Issues
- Crime in the News
- Dealing with Digital Stress
- Digital Media Experiences are Shaped by the Tools We Use: The Disconnection Challenge
- Digital Outreach for Civic Engagement
- Digital Storytelling for Civic Engagement
- Don’t Drink and Drive: Assessing the Effectiveness of Anti-Drinking Campaigns
- First Person
- First, Do No Harm: Being an Active Witness to Cyberbullying
- Images of Learning
- Making Media for Democratic Citizenship
- Marketing to Teens: Alternate Ads
- Marketing to Teens: Gotta Have It! Designer & Brand Names
- Marketing to Teens: Marketing Tactics
- Marketing to Teens: Talking Back
- Miscast and Seldom Seen
- Online Cultures and Values
- Online Propaganda and the Proliferation of Hate
- Political Cartoons
- Popular Music and Music Videos
- Privacy Rights of Children and Teens
- Reality Check: Authentication 101
- Reality Check: We Are All Broadcasters
- Relationships and Sexuality in the Media
- Secure Comics
- Sex in Advertising
- Suffragettes and Iron Ladies
- The Blockbuster Movie
- The Citizen Reporter
- The Front Page
- The Pornography Debate: Controversy in Advertising
- The Price of Happiness
- There's No Excuse: Confronting Moral Disengagement in Sexting
- Violence on Television (Governance in Television and Radio Communications in Canada)
- Watching the Elections
- Your Online Resume