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Evaluation




 AS Media Studies 2010   1
Evaluation
 In your evaluation you will have to answer 7 questions regarding your music
 magazine coursework

 Your evaluation is worth up to 20 marks

 You will be graded on the same four levels as the rest of your coursework
 (minimal, basic, proficient, excellent)

 You should use the same mix of text, still images and video to help explain your
 points

 Your evaluation should be seen as a chance to reflect on what you have learnt
 and gives you an opportunity to get more marks towards your final grade.

 The difference between a basic and an excellent evaluation is an entire grade
 boundary.
                                   AS Media Studies 2010                         2
Questions
 The questions that must be addressed in the evaluation are:

 • In what ways does your media product use, develop or challenge forms and conventions
 of real media products?

 • How does your media product represent particular social groups?

 • What kind of media institution might distribute your media product and why?

 • Who would be the audience for your media product?

 • How did you attract/address your audience?

 • What have you learnt about technologies from the process of constructing this product?

 • Looking back at your preliminary task, what do you feel you have learnt in the
 progression from it to the full product?

                                       AS Media Studies 2010                           3
In what ways does your media product
use, develop or challenge forms and
conventions of real media products?
 When you carried out research on existing products you identified certain
 codes and conventions which exist in magazines covering your style of
 music.

 Here you need to show where you followed those conventions that you
 found in your research, highlight any ways in which you tried to develop
 those conventions and explain any conventions that you decided to
 challenge.




                               AS Media Studies 2010                        4
Conventions

 Conventions
 Definition
 plural noun


 the ‘rules’ that are generally understood and accepted when
 producing a media text in a particular genre. For example, the
 conventions of a soapopera include the setting in a small
 community of place of work, the fact that there is generally one
 episodebroadcast per day, often with an omnibus at the
 weekend, the cliff-hanger ending to encourage the audience to
 watch again tomorrow, and many more.


                             AS Media Studies 2010                  5
Conventions
                                                  Here are just a few conventions
                                                  you could talk about.
 • Page numbers
 • Masthead                                       Take each one, plus any others
                                                  you think of, and consider the
 • Fonts                                          way the real world products
 • Colour scheme                                  present these elements of the
                                                  magazine.
 • Style of photography
 • Writing style                                  Then think about how you
 • Pull quotes                                    presented these element?

 • Cover lines                                    Show us as well as tell. You could
                                                  put your work alongside existing
                                                  products to illustrate where you
                                                  followed, developed or
                                                  challenged conventions.
                          AS Media Studies 2010                                 6
How does your media product represent
particular social groups?

 Your magazine has been made with a specific audience in mind

 You should discuss how your magazine represents the social groups
 within in.

 Think back to your previous work on representation and consider some of
 the areas we looked at which are used to define people such as
 age, gender and class.

 What is the dominant representation of these groups and how does your
 product fit in with that?


                              AS Media Studies 2010                   7
Social Groups
 You are not telling us who your audience is but instead what we can learn
 from your product about the social groups who would be the audience
 and the social groups featured within the magazine.

 A good starting point might be to think about the dominant
 representation of the groups within your magazine.

 How are teenagers usually represented? How are young adults or young
 children often seen in the media?

 How does your media product follow this representation or challenge it?

 What information does your magazine give about its audience? What
 does the content, the photography, the writing style, the colour scheme
 etc tell us about your audience?
                                AS Media Studies 2010                      8
Social Groups
 Age
 You identified a specific age for your audience. How have your represented
 people of that age in your magazine?

 Gender
 Your magazine has a target gender. How does your magazine represent gender?

 Class
 Your magazine was made with a certain class in mind. How does it
 represent that class of people?

 Social groups
 Your readers may well belong to or associate with a particular social
 group such a punks, indie kids, hipsters, goths etc. Think about how your
 product represents those groups.                                          9
What kind of media institution might distribute
your media product and why?

 When you carried out your research you should have noted down the
 publisher of your magazine.

 You might also have looked on the websites of these institutions to find
 media packs.

 This should have given you a good idea of the institutions that publish
 your style of magazine




                                AS Media Studies 2010                       10
Institutions
 You should look at your research (and maybe do some more) on the
 publisher of the magazines you looked at.

 Look at their websites and find out what else they publish. Do they have
 other magazines aimed at your target audience? Do they have a range of
 music magazines they publish? Is there a gap in their range that your
 product could fill?

 You may find that a publisher already has a similar magazine, in which
 case you need to discuss the advantages/disadvantages of them
 publishing your magazine.

 You may find that a publisher does not have a similar magazine to yours.
 In which case you could discuss the advantages/disadvantages of them
 publishing your magazine.
                                AS Media Studies 2010                     11
Institutions
 DO NOT suggest that a suitable institution to distribute your magazine
 would be WH Smith, Tesco or any other newsagent.

 These are not publishing institutions. They do not distribute
 magazines, they simple sell them!




                                 AS Media Studies 2010                    12
Who would be the audience for your media
product?


 You identified a potential audience for your media product at the
 research and planning stage.

 Now is the time to review your work and consider the audience that it
 would be suitable for.

 Explain who your audience would be (age, gender, class etc)




                               AS Media Studies 2010                     13
Audience
 You did a lot of work at the start of the project researching products and
 their audiences.

 You need to explain who the audience would be for your final product.

 Why not try looking at your work objectively and imagine that you have
 been presented with these pages as a real media text.

 Who do you think the audience would be? Apply the same methods that
 you used in your research stage to identify the audience and describe
 them to us.

 Remember to use pictures and text and other medium (video, sound) to
 get your ideas across.

                                 AS Media Studies 2010                    14
How did you attract/address your audience?


  You carefully considered every element of your magazine to make sure it
  would appeal to its audience.

  You need to explain the methods you used to attract your audience.

  You then need to explain the methods you used to address your
  audience.




                                AS Media Studies 2010                  15
Attracting and addressing your audience
 This question gives you a chance to really show off all the hard work you
 did and point out all those little details you included to make your
 audience interested in your product.

 Maybe it was a special font, brilliant photography or an interesting colour
 scheme that you used, or maybe all of the above.

 Use the full potential of your blog and/or PowerPoint to show all the
 things you did to attract your audience and make your product visually
 appealing to them.




                                 AS Media Studies 2010                    16
Attracting and addressing your audience

 Once you attracted your audience, you addressed them.

 Give us examples of the way you used language to talk to your audience.
 You used certain words, certain phrases and certain writing styles to
 address the audience on a level they would feel comfortable with. Give us
 examples, explain to us.

  Think about the way your photography addresses the audience. You
 planned your models, costumes props and locations to say something to
 your audience. How do your photographs speak to your audience? What
 story do they tell?



                                AS Media Studies 2010                   17
What have you learnt about technologies from
the process of constructing this product?


 You used a huge amount of technology during this
 project.

 What did you learn about them while making your
 magazine?



                     AS Media Studies 2010     18
Technology
 You could start by listing all the different pieces of technology you used in
 your project. Think about both hardware and software and think about all
 stages (research, planning, production, evaluation) that you went
 through.

 Some of you had never used Photoshop before, others have learnt new
 things about it. Be specific. Tell us what you learnt to do and how it
 affected your final product.

 Some technology may have been used for organisation
 (word, excel, email) some for presentation (PowerPoint, blogs) and some
 for production (photoshop, cameras etc).

 Think about how different pieces of technology came together to allow
 you to make this project.
                                 AS Media Studies 2010                      19
Looking back at your preliminary task, what do
you feel you have learnt in the progression from
it to the full product?
 You skills have grown of the past couple of months.

 Explain how you have developed using your college magazine and
 finished pages as examples.




                               AS Media Studies 2010              20
Progression
 You have come on a long way since you made your college magazine.

 You produced that without any product research, with very few plans and
 with very little knowledge of the software and hardware you were using.

 You developed specific skills in Photoshop and other programs to enable
 you to produce your final pages. You can explain what you have
 learnt, giving specific examples.

 Use the potential of your blog/PowerPoint to show us the progression.

 Talk about how your development has lead to your final product.



                               AS Media Studies 2010                     21

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Evaluation

  • 1. Evaluation AS Media Studies 2010 1
  • 2. Evaluation In your evaluation you will have to answer 7 questions regarding your music magazine coursework Your evaluation is worth up to 20 marks You will be graded on the same four levels as the rest of your coursework (minimal, basic, proficient, excellent) You should use the same mix of text, still images and video to help explain your points Your evaluation should be seen as a chance to reflect on what you have learnt and gives you an opportunity to get more marks towards your final grade. The difference between a basic and an excellent evaluation is an entire grade boundary. AS Media Studies 2010 2
  • 3. Questions The questions that must be addressed in the evaluation are: • In what ways does your media product use, develop or challenge forms and conventions of real media products? • How does your media product represent particular social groups? • What kind of media institution might distribute your media product and why? • Who would be the audience for your media product? • How did you attract/address your audience? • What have you learnt about technologies from the process of constructing this product? • Looking back at your preliminary task, what do you feel you have learnt in the progression from it to the full product? AS Media Studies 2010 3
  • 4. In what ways does your media product use, develop or challenge forms and conventions of real media products? When you carried out research on existing products you identified certain codes and conventions which exist in magazines covering your style of music. Here you need to show where you followed those conventions that you found in your research, highlight any ways in which you tried to develop those conventions and explain any conventions that you decided to challenge. AS Media Studies 2010 4
  • 5. Conventions Conventions Definition plural noun the ‘rules’ that are generally understood and accepted when producing a media text in a particular genre. For example, the conventions of a soapopera include the setting in a small community of place of work, the fact that there is generally one episodebroadcast per day, often with an omnibus at the weekend, the cliff-hanger ending to encourage the audience to watch again tomorrow, and many more. AS Media Studies 2010 5
  • 6. Conventions Here are just a few conventions you could talk about. • Page numbers • Masthead Take each one, plus any others you think of, and consider the • Fonts way the real world products • Colour scheme present these elements of the magazine. • Style of photography • Writing style Then think about how you • Pull quotes presented these element? • Cover lines Show us as well as tell. You could put your work alongside existing products to illustrate where you followed, developed or challenged conventions. AS Media Studies 2010 6
  • 7. How does your media product represent particular social groups? Your magazine has been made with a specific audience in mind You should discuss how your magazine represents the social groups within in. Think back to your previous work on representation and consider some of the areas we looked at which are used to define people such as age, gender and class. What is the dominant representation of these groups and how does your product fit in with that? AS Media Studies 2010 7
  • 8. Social Groups You are not telling us who your audience is but instead what we can learn from your product about the social groups who would be the audience and the social groups featured within the magazine. A good starting point might be to think about the dominant representation of the groups within your magazine. How are teenagers usually represented? How are young adults or young children often seen in the media? How does your media product follow this representation or challenge it? What information does your magazine give about its audience? What does the content, the photography, the writing style, the colour scheme etc tell us about your audience? AS Media Studies 2010 8
  • 9. Social Groups Age You identified a specific age for your audience. How have your represented people of that age in your magazine? Gender Your magazine has a target gender. How does your magazine represent gender? Class Your magazine was made with a certain class in mind. How does it represent that class of people? Social groups Your readers may well belong to or associate with a particular social group such a punks, indie kids, hipsters, goths etc. Think about how your product represents those groups. 9
  • 10. What kind of media institution might distribute your media product and why? When you carried out your research you should have noted down the publisher of your magazine. You might also have looked on the websites of these institutions to find media packs. This should have given you a good idea of the institutions that publish your style of magazine AS Media Studies 2010 10
  • 11. Institutions You should look at your research (and maybe do some more) on the publisher of the magazines you looked at. Look at their websites and find out what else they publish. Do they have other magazines aimed at your target audience? Do they have a range of music magazines they publish? Is there a gap in their range that your product could fill? You may find that a publisher already has a similar magazine, in which case you need to discuss the advantages/disadvantages of them publishing your magazine. You may find that a publisher does not have a similar magazine to yours. In which case you could discuss the advantages/disadvantages of them publishing your magazine. AS Media Studies 2010 11
  • 12. Institutions DO NOT suggest that a suitable institution to distribute your magazine would be WH Smith, Tesco or any other newsagent. These are not publishing institutions. They do not distribute magazines, they simple sell them! AS Media Studies 2010 12
  • 13. Who would be the audience for your media product? You identified a potential audience for your media product at the research and planning stage. Now is the time to review your work and consider the audience that it would be suitable for. Explain who your audience would be (age, gender, class etc) AS Media Studies 2010 13
  • 14. Audience You did a lot of work at the start of the project researching products and their audiences. You need to explain who the audience would be for your final product. Why not try looking at your work objectively and imagine that you have been presented with these pages as a real media text. Who do you think the audience would be? Apply the same methods that you used in your research stage to identify the audience and describe them to us. Remember to use pictures and text and other medium (video, sound) to get your ideas across. AS Media Studies 2010 14
  • 15. How did you attract/address your audience? You carefully considered every element of your magazine to make sure it would appeal to its audience. You need to explain the methods you used to attract your audience. You then need to explain the methods you used to address your audience. AS Media Studies 2010 15
  • 16. Attracting and addressing your audience This question gives you a chance to really show off all the hard work you did and point out all those little details you included to make your audience interested in your product. Maybe it was a special font, brilliant photography or an interesting colour scheme that you used, or maybe all of the above. Use the full potential of your blog and/or PowerPoint to show all the things you did to attract your audience and make your product visually appealing to them. AS Media Studies 2010 16
  • 17. Attracting and addressing your audience Once you attracted your audience, you addressed them. Give us examples of the way you used language to talk to your audience. You used certain words, certain phrases and certain writing styles to address the audience on a level they would feel comfortable with. Give us examples, explain to us. Think about the way your photography addresses the audience. You planned your models, costumes props and locations to say something to your audience. How do your photographs speak to your audience? What story do they tell? AS Media Studies 2010 17
  • 18. What have you learnt about technologies from the process of constructing this product? You used a huge amount of technology during this project. What did you learn about them while making your magazine? AS Media Studies 2010 18
  • 19. Technology You could start by listing all the different pieces of technology you used in your project. Think about both hardware and software and think about all stages (research, planning, production, evaluation) that you went through. Some of you had never used Photoshop before, others have learnt new things about it. Be specific. Tell us what you learnt to do and how it affected your final product. Some technology may have been used for organisation (word, excel, email) some for presentation (PowerPoint, blogs) and some for production (photoshop, cameras etc). Think about how different pieces of technology came together to allow you to make this project. AS Media Studies 2010 19
  • 20. Looking back at your preliminary task, what do you feel you have learnt in the progression from it to the full product? You skills have grown of the past couple of months. Explain how you have developed using your college magazine and finished pages as examples. AS Media Studies 2010 20
  • 21. Progression You have come on a long way since you made your college magazine. You produced that without any product research, with very few plans and with very little knowledge of the software and hardware you were using. You developed specific skills in Photoshop and other programs to enable you to produce your final pages. You can explain what you have learnt, giving specific examples. Use the potential of your blog/PowerPoint to show us the progression. Talk about how your development has lead to your final product. AS Media Studies 2010 21