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Pay only $1 per month ($11.99 per year)
for Learning Guides to this and hundreds of other films. SUPPLEMENT SCHOOL CURRICULUM! PROMOTE SOCIAL-EMOTIONAL LEARNING! New Learning Guides are added on a regular basis!
Modern day students will spend at least several hours each week watching screens. TWM's Introduction to Cinematic and Theatrical Technique, featuring material written by John Golden, will assist teachers in presenting this information to students. What do teachers and parents say about TeachWithMovies.com? Click Here |
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Just $11.99 per year gives you Learning Guides and Lesson Plans for 285 movies covering most of the K -12 curriculum! Click Here to Subscribe.
"Learning Guides" help educators create lesson plans by providing background, discussion questions, projects, and vocabulary lists. "Movie Lesson Plans" are more formal with lectures, student handouts, comprehension tests and answer keys. TeachWithMovies.com provides more than 285 Learning Guides and seven Movie Lesson Plans. Check out the helpful indexes. TEACHERS: A film or movie can be an alternative educational experience that highlights points covered by the curriculum. Each Movie Lesson Plan and Learning Guide will help you maximize the benefits that your class derives from watching and discussing the movie. PARENTS: Watch the movie with your children and briefly talk about its message. Often, just one or two comments will make the film a meaningful experience. Your family will grow closer as all of you learn about history, culture and people. You will gain some positive control over screen time. Unlock this international treasure for use by educators and parents. Subscribe for only $11.99 per year ($1 each month). Click Here TeachWithMovies.com does not provide the movies or films. |
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EXCERPT FROM THE INTRODUCTIONAngles: Once the director has decided on the framing, the question of the angle of the shot presents itself. If the director positions the camera below a subject, looking up, the director is using a low-angle shot. This has the effect of making the subject look larger and more powerful than it normally would. Orson Welles, in Citizen Kane, used a number of low-angle shots (at one point digging a hole in the studio's floor!) to show that his main character, a wealthy politician and newspaper publisher, was much larger-than-life. The Introduction to Cinematic and Theatrical Technique also contains suggestions about how to present these materials to classes and student worksheet created for John Golden to help teachers present these materials to students. A subscription to TeachWithMovies.com will give teachers access to 285 Learning Guides from which they can easily create lesson plans. Click here to subscribe and introduce children to the wonders of Cinematic and Theatrical Technique. Already a member? Click here. |
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