Thursday, 25 September 2014

Contents Conventions

Contents

One main image relating to the feature article
Other small images, usually up to 4
Colours – contents page use the same, simple colour scheme as the front cover

Images should take up 50% of the page
Images should contain Page Number and Anchorage Text (Description, occasionally a Pull Quote)



Structured layout should include 1-3 columns
Usually divided into categories and headings e.g Main categories – features and regulars
Features in different font/border as its special

Contents items - Bold/Italic titles in size 12/13pt - Description in size 11/12pt

Top of the page

name of magazine, issue date and word contents

Various places

Subscription and contact information
Issue date/ month
Social Media Info
Photographer Credits
Sometimes there is a letter from the editor
Sometimes there is an image of the front cover


Wednesday, 24 September 2014

Monday, 15 September 2014

Student Progress

We will be doing our first progress checks on Monday 22nd September .

Please ensure that any outstanding work for Mrs Davies has been submitted and that you email Chislehurstmedia@gmail.com or jambrose@chsfg.co.uk your School Magazine blog address.

We will be checking to see that expected work has been completed and that you are putting in the effort required to be a successful A level student.

Failure to complete work, poor attendance/punctuality and low effort or a poor attitude to learning could result in a Red Warning and you being given a low target grade.



Thursday, 11 September 2014

Basic Checklist


By Friday 12th September

* Intro
* 2 Front Covers
* 2 Contents
* Explanation of Basic Conventions of Mags - i.e what do front covers/contents have in common - Could also add any further posts about color, typography etc
* Explanation of Idea, Possible Titles (x3)

Will spend these two weeks working on Photoshop and indesign in class, so these tasks must be done at home

By Friday 19th September

* Sketch of Idea (Contents and Front Cover) Can do using computer software or on paper (photograph or scan to blog)
* Intro post about Research - What is it - Why are you doing it?
* Questionnaire 
* Comments about Results - Could use graphical analysis in Excel

By Friday 26th September

* Another sketch of idea, taking into account research
* Plan - Schedule
* Photographs of locations, models, etc.
* Final photographs

By Friday 10th October

Front Cover Finished

By Friday 17th October

* Contents & Front Cover of Mag Finished
* Begin Evaluation

By Friday 24th October

* Submission of School Mag

Wednesday, 10 September 2014

Preliminary Exercise - School Magazine!


Your blog needs to include at least the following information. You can structure it however you like in as many blog posts as you like as long as it is easy to navigate and well ordered.

Presentation of Research and Planning: 20 marks

Construction: 60 marks

Evaluation: 20 marks

Introduction to your blog

Introduction to Magazine Conventions including analysis of Typography, Colours, Mode of address - There is information on the resource blog or you can easily find articles on google.

Min 2 school mag front cover annotations & 2 Contents pages - ensure you use appropriate media language. It is also good practice to locate school/college magazines from a range of different sources e.g. different editions of own school/college magazine and other local schools should not be too difficult to find before online secondary research.



Audiences & Audience Theory Intro, Research & Planning

Title/Theme/Sketch for your magazine - Write an intro to why you chose this and include at least 3 alternative titles/ideas. Then include a rough hand drawn version that you can scan and upload to your blog.



Questionnaire and analysis of results - Identify and record (with justification in your Blog) the target audience of School/College Magazines (pupils/students, parents and guardians, local employers and businesses).


Ensure the questionnaire has a visually interesting design and does not use a pre existing template (try and avoid using Word).

Include open and closed questions e.g. closed = “how many times a year do you think a school/college magazine should be published?” Open = “comment on my front cover images, what does it tell you about the college?”

Submit electronically via social network links your early sketches and ideas (link your Blog to Facebook etc.), plus your Questionnaire - send to a sample 10 of your target audience as evidence of primary research.

Collate the responses on your Blog.

Analyse the results graphically using a graph on Excel for quantitative responses and as a summary paragraph for qualitative results 

Include one blank Questionnaire in your Blog.

Intro, Research and Planning for location & student Photoshoot

Organise a photo shoot and undertake original photography of students in different locations in and around your school/college – good Smartphone cameras will be enough for this early task but digital stills cameras are preferable and must be used for the main task.



10-15 photographs will be sufficient and again the images need to be uploaded and included in your Blog research and planning portfolio.

Make time for a ‘show and tell’ session with recorded feedback from your peers and students on the photo shoot: choose the images you will be using from this feedback.

The final picture for the cover must be a student, framed centrally in medium close up while you may use other smaller images for the cover and contents page.

Again, upload ALL the images and feedback in your Blog.

Second Sketch/Design for front cover - Develop further your front Cover flat plan and flat plan of your Contents Page.

Design an appropriate masthead – experiment with using different fonts and those from websites like www.dafont.com.

Add cover lines, additional images and background appropriate to the images and layout.
Include the school/college’s mantra (their ethos in a sentence – e.g. “Where students come first”). 

Think about mode of address – how do you want to ‘speak’ to your target audience?

Ensure you also include the month/season of publication e.g. November or ‘Autumn’) and also convergent links to Twitter and Facebook, a website and the price (if sold).

Research & Design Contents - With the Contents Page remember there must be house style evident from the front cover – this can be achieved by using a similar colour palette, font, language code or choice of image.

Remember the conventions of a Contents Page differ from a Front Cover e.g. more text on a Contents Page with an approximately 50:50 ratio with the images.

Contents Pages have more inset images (between 3 and 5), sub-headings with listed contents (not too listy, think about design) with page numbers, variation in typography and graphics.

Your Front Cover may often be the selling point of a magazine but spend as much time on the design of the Contents Page.

Create Magazine





Evaluation

Evaluate your Construction using 6 Key Questions


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 (publisher) 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?

Friday, 5 September 2014

Links to student bridging units

All of the links to students' work will appear here. Well done to those of you who have emailed already.

If you can't see your blog address - please make sure you have followed the instructions to email it to 

chislehurstmedia@gmail.com.

Remember - if you don't tell us the address, we don't know your blog exists... which means you will get no credit for it!

Student
Bridging Unit
Karen Swift
http://karenswiftasbridging.blogspot.co.uk/
Sacha Relf
http://sachaasmedia.blogspot.co.uk/
Victoria Cowburn
http://victoriacowburnasbridging.blogspot.co.uk/
Kelsey Killick
http://kelseykillickmedia.blogspot.co.uk/
Millicen Sharratt
http://millicentasbridging.blogspot.co.uk/
Toyin Giwa
http://toyingiwamedia.blogspot.co.uk/
Claire Pike
http://claireasbridging.blogspot.co.uk/
Robyn Johnson
http://johnsonrobyn.blogspot.co.uk/
Sophie Day
http://sophieasbridging.blogspot.co.uk/
Tate Landy
http://tlbridgingunit.blogspot.co.uk/
Yasmin Osman
http://yasosmanasbridging.blogspot.co.uk/
Haylle Daynton
http://introusvauc.blogspot.co.uk/
Sarah Ford
http://sarahfordasbridging.blogspot.co.uk/
Katie Bishop
http://katieasbridging.blogspot.co.uk/
Yasmin Tumburi
http://yastumburiasbridging.blogspot.co.uk/
Mia Matthews
http://mialouisesaysasbridging.blogspot.co.uk/
Angel Rackham-Beadle
http://angeldollyasbridging.blogspot.co.uk/
Chloe Stephenson
Manual Submission

Key Magazine Terms







Follow the link for key magazine terms....

Link :)

Language & Register - Mode of Address


How will your magazine 'speak' to its readers?

Language Registers

There are five language registers or styles. Each level has an appropriate use that is determined by differing situations. It would certainly be inappropriate to use language and vocabulary reserve for a boyfriend or girlfriend when speaking in the classroom. Thus the appropriate language register depends upon the audience (who), the topic (what), purpose (why) and location (where).

You must control the use of language registers in order to enjoy success in every aspect and situation you encounter.

1.      Static Register
This style of communications RARELY or NEVER changes. It is “frozen” in time and content. e.g. the Pledge of Allegiance, the Lord’s Prayer, the Preamble to the US Constitution, the Alma Mater, a bibliographic reference, laws .

2.      Formal Register
This language is used in formal settings and is one-way in nature. This use of language usually follows a commonly accepted format. It is usually impersonal and formal. A common format for this register are speeches. e.g. sermons, rhetorical statements and questions, speeches, pronouncements made by judges,  announcements.

3.      Consultative Register
This is a standard form of communications. Users engage in a mutually accepted structure of communications. It is formal and societal expectations accompany the users of this speech. It is professional discourse. e.g. when strangers meet, communications between a superior and a subordinate, doctor & patient, lawyer & client, lawyer & judge, teacher & student, counselor & client,

4.      Casual Register
This is informal language used by peers and friends. Slang, vulgarities and colloquialisms are normal. This is “group” language. One must be member to engage in this register. e.g. buddies, teammates, chats and emails, and blogs, and letters to friends.

5.      Intimate Register
This communications is private. It is reserved for close family members or intimate people. e.g. husband & wife, boyfriend & girlfriend, siblings, parent & children.

Rule of Language Use:
One can usually transition from one language register to an adjacent one without encountering repercussions. However, skipping one or more levels is usually considered inappropriate and even offensive. 



Colour

Remember, as part of a house style, producers need to come up with a colour palette that best reflects the brand, appeals to the target audience and represents both in the way that they intend.



Here are some links you might like to check out when thinking about colour palettes:

http://www.color-wheel-pro.com/color-meaning.html - a useful guide to colours and their connotations

http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2010/01/28/color-theory-for-designers-part-1-the-meaning-of-color/ - a very detailed article, aimed at designers

http://openlearn.open.ac.uk/mod/oucontent/view.php?id=397565&section=1.3.3 - Guidance for creating websites, but with relevant references to using colour to target different audiences


Typography

Some useful links

What fonts work well together

http://www.will-harris.com/typepairs.htm

Typography

http://webdesign.tutsplus.com/articles/typography-articles/a-beginners-guide-to-pairing-fonts/

Font Finder


Thursday, 4 September 2014

Intro to Research

Research 
What is a school magazine? What are their different purposes and audiences?
Write a short blog post summarising what a school magazine is. Think about how they are disseminated to their readers? Has this changed? Why are they made? Who is the audience? Does it matter if the school is a Grammar school? Link to different types of audience.
What are the conventions of a magazine front cover?
Look at the conventions of a magazine cover . Examine the layout, colours, typography and mode of address       
It is essential that you consider how this research will inform your decision making. 
Min 2 school mag front cover annotations & 2 Contents pages - ensure you use appropriate media language. It is also good practice to locate school/college magazines from a range of different sources e.g. different editions of own school/college magazine and other local schools should not be too difficult to find before online secondary research.
Here is an example of a additional way in which you could present your ideas. A table like this one shows that you have made the vital link between your own research and your own practical work.The observations that you make will, of course, depend on the texts which you have studied so don’t expect them to be exactly the same as those recorded by other students.

Observation
Impact on My Work
Most covers use a single image – often a medium shot, featuring one or two students. They are engaged in either a classroom/extra-curricular activity but a direct mode of address is employed as they look into the camera.
I will follow this convention as I intend to photograph two students and position them centrally. A medium shot will enable me to include the students whilst capturing something of the background.
However, I want the students to seem unaware of the camera and engaged in the activity of film making.
The mise en scene creates a sense of a well-equipped school which promotes dynamic learning. E.g. inclusion of computers/sports equipment.
My inclusion of video cameras has been influenced by this observation. I hope that these connote a sense of creativity as well as suggesting that the school environment promotes active learning with up to date equipment. I will ensure that text referring to the activity anchors the image and makes it clear that the students are engaged in a film making project.


Some useful terms:

Representation ,denote, connote, iconography ,mise en scene, composition, framing, focus, foreground,colour,lighting, background, text, anchors, audience, traditional, contemporary, contrast, extend, complement, convention, follow, subvert, experiment

Introduction


The OCR AS Media studies coursework is made up of two tasks and is worth 50% of the AS Qualification.

1.      Preliminary exercise: Produce the front page of a new school/college magazine, featuring a photograph of a student in medium close-up plus some appropriately laid-out text and a masthead. Additionally candidates must produce a mock-up of the layout of the contents page to demonstrate their grasp of DTP.

2.      Main task: The front page, contents and double page spread of a new music magazine.


All images and text used must be original and produced by the candidate


All candidates will utilise DTP (Desktop Publishing Software) such as InDesign and an image manipulation program such as Photoshop. Such software should be as close to industry standard as possible (This means No publisher!).   

A digital record of the project is required; therefore each task needs to be on its own unique blog.

Within your blog you are required to evidence a wide range of modern interactive digital applications

Before you Begin

In your area create a folder to store your work. You should call this folder something sensible such as Year 12, Media.

You will be uploading everything onto blogs at each stage of the project but ensure you double save everything regularly onto your own 16gb memory stick and also onto your school user area. Do not rely on one source to save work.

Saving regularly means every 10-15 minutes
Set up a Blog
A blog is a web based publication, or a web - log. A blog is established by the creation of journal like pages. These pages can contain typed copy, images, audio and video which are posted onto the site.
Each ‘post’ can be commented upon. This can be done as peer reviews, when a teacher or student posts a piece of work and others can add to it. For Media Studies, blogs are used to create your working portfolio. You will be required to frequently update to upload all your planning, research, production work and evaluation.
A moderator can then access this all to mark, instead of hard copies.
This is important for you, not just in terms of assessment but being able to document in real time your creative journey and incorporating a wider variety of media into the presentation of their work.
For Blogger you will need to set up a Google account.

Please make sure your Google account has a sensible name.

Your first Blog will be called something like

mynameschoolmagazineAS.blogspot.co.uk

Your second Blog will be called something like

mynamemusicmagazineAS.blogspot.co.uk

Please email your new blog address to chislehurstmedia@gmail.com

- Your first post should be an introduction, stating who you are and why you have set up the blog.