國語(繁體)
Log In

世界電影史 - B 學期

班級
Courtney Runchey
明星教育家
平均評分:4.9評論數量:(37)
在這個為期 14 週的課程中,學生們利用電影作為舞台,將歷史帶入生活,並沉浸在歷史中。我們將透過電影、影片、文章、原始文獻,以有趣的方式了解過去。
我們無法翻譯此文,請刷新頁面並再試一次。

課堂經歷

美國等級 9 - 12
Beginner 等級
1.	Analyze the causes, scale, and consequences of global conflict in this era. 
2.	Assess World War I as a total and global war. 
3.	Understand the causes and consequences of historical events that occurred during World War I, such as the Russian Revolution and the Armenian Genocide. 
4.	Understand the rise of fascism in various regions of the world, including its causes and consequences. 
5.	Evaluate why internationalism failed to prevent the rise of fascism and the Second World War. 
6.	Understand and evaluate the causes, scale, and consequences of the Holocaust.
7.	Use historical thinking skills and reasoning practices such as claim testing, causation, historical comparison, and continuity and change over time to analyze historical events and processes. 
8.	Create and support arguments using historical evidence to communicate conclusions through individual or shared writing. 
9. 	Use historical thinking skills to understand how world events are connected and impact countries on a global stage.
10.	Understand the causes and consequences of historical events that occurred during conflicts in the Middle East during the 20th and 21st century.
I have worked in education for over 15 years, the last 10 as a homeschool parent. My passion is helping students create a deeper understanding of complex material by examining different perspectives. The stories that are told matter, even more in today's world. Understanding another perspective and story can help us relate. I love sharing new diverse literature that is engaging and expands students' understanding. History can come alive using novels, movies, and primary source materials in my classes. When examining history there are many factors that we will discuss including socioeconomic, religious, bias in narration and understanding who the narrator is. Critical thinking is a skill that all students will work on, while we engage in discussions about the topics covered students will be questioned to consider different perspectives and reasons for events or choices.  

I started my schooling with a B.B.A. from Northwood University. After several years in the corporate climate I decided to go back to school to get a teaching degree. I attended Eastern Michigan University and finished my classes and all testing required for the teaching degree. The semester I was to start student teaching one of my children became seriously ill. Once they were recovered I was starting to homeschool my children and never went back to finish the program. 
 
While I have taught at several homeschool groups and co-ops history for over 10 years. With my History classes I use a combination of primary sources, articles, reference materials, and videos to teach students. I teach students to evaluate the bias of the author, the purpose of the piece of writing, and who's points of views are put forth. We were often trying to look at marginalized peoples stories that may not always be highlighted. I have taught both Howard Zinn's History for Young People, Big History Project, and History through film. While film can be a great jumping in point to gain students interest I do make sure to go back and clarify fact from fiction to students. The films are not presented as facts but as a place to start to gain understanding of the world at that time. 


I have continued to attend teacher professional developments including:
ACE - Outschool Certification
Completed Teaching Big History Certification
Completed Teaching AP World History Certification
Completed Teaching World History Certification
EdCamp - EMU Multiple Years
NerdCamp - Parma Multiple Years
NaNoWriMo - Online, and local events Multiple Years
Others offered at EMU and MSU
提供的家庭作業
Part of this class is watching major motion pictures most weeks. The movies are typically between 1.5 - 2 hours. Some additional video clips, and articles will be assigned some weeks and they are usually 10 minutes.
2 - 4 每週課外時間
提供的評估
Students who choose to get assessments will be doing a final project. This will be a topic of students' choice event or person during the time frame we cover that they are interested in they will present information using slides.
提供的成績
Students who receive grades based on the following. Final Project 50% Class Discussions and Assignments 40% Homework 10%
This class is designed to use videos, movies, and articles that can be adjusted to different reading levels. This is a great option for students with ADHD, Dyslexia, ASD, or other issues. The information is presented in a variety of formats
除了 Outschool 教室外,本課程也使用:
I have included the recommendations from Common Sense Media ratings when available. The website this information was taken from is: https://www.commonsensemedia.org/

While each movie has been selected carefully to bring something to the class and help students gain understanding. There is no issue with skipping any of the movies for any reason. They are just to help students so they will not be tested on them.

Week									Movie

    2								They Shall Not Grow Old
								Rated R, 2019, 99 MIn.
								Common Sense 16+, Parents 14+

Parents need to know that They Shall Not Grow Old is a documentary by Oscar-winning director Peter Jackson that takes century-old footage of World War I and gives it an upgrade; it's restored, corrected, colored, and given sound effects, spoken voices, and narration. The effect is astonishing, groundbreaking, essential viewing, although the mature material makes it best for older teens and adults. The wartime violence is extreme: Expect to see dead bodies; mangled corpses; bloody, gory wounds; and other shocking, horrifying images. There are also graphic descriptions of dire conditions, and you'll see guns/shooting, shells, and explosions. Narration talks of soldiers visiting brothels; some (fairly tame) cartoon drawings depict this. Men's naked bottoms are shown in a nonsexual context. Soldiers are shown smoking and drinking beer, both of which are also discussed at some length. Language includes "piss," "hell," "damn," and "bastards."

3								The Promise
								Rated PG-13, 2017, 132 Min.
								Common Sense 14+, Parents 13+

Parents need to know that The Promise is an earnest but disturbing wartime drama about the Armenian genocide in Turkey during World War I. Scenes depict graphic atrocities, hangings, beatings, street riots, burning buildings, mass graves full of women and children, execution-style killings, and other brutal, intense images. There's also some drinking (sometimes to excess) and kissing, as well as implied sex (no graphic nudity); language is very infrequent, but there is one use each of "s--t" and "hell." While it's not easy to watch, the movie does show how war can prompt some people to rise to the occasion, demonstrate courage, and work to save innocents. Christian Bale, Oscar Isaac, and Charlotte Le Bon star.

4								The Imitation Game
								Rated PG-13, 2014, 114 MIn.
								Common Sense 13+, Parents 12+

Parents need to know that The Imitation Game is a historical drama that explores the role that cryptologists and mathematicians played in World War II. Expect candid discussions about lives lost during war, accompanied by footage showing bombs falling and soldiers firing guns. A boy is also tormented by school bullies. Leading the team of scientists trying to break the Germans' Enigma code is Alan Turing (Benedict Cumberbatch), a closeted homosexual who ends up being vilified for his sexuality. The subject of is handled fairly delicately and is discussed in mostly oblique ways, though characters do call him slurs, like "toff." Ultimately there are strong themes about the power of persistence and the fact that gender doesn't dictate intelligence or competency.

5								Schindler’s List
								Rated R, 1993, 196 MIn.
								Common Sense 15+, Parents 15+

Parents need to know that Schindler's List is a brutal, emotionally devastating three-hour drama that won several Oscars and has a powerful message about the human spirit -- but it pulls absolutely no punches when depicting the Holocaust. There are arbitrary murders and mass killings, Nazi commanders compare Jews to rats, children are killed, and there are scenes of shocking, grisly violence. There's also plenty of smoking and drinking, and several scenes of nakedness. In two of them, a woman is naked from the waist up in bed and in sexual situations. But in the rest, nakedness is used to humiliate and harass Jewish residents of concentration camps. There's full-frontal nudity of Jewish prisoners in the shower, when they are being stripped and examined, etc. There are anti-Semitic epithets as well as words such as "f--k," "s--t," "bitch," "damn," and "ass."

6								Bridge of Spies
								Rated PG-13, 2015, 135 Min.
								Common Sense 13+, Parents 11+

Parents need to know that Steven Spielberg's Bridge of Spies is a tense, taut Cold War thriller inspired by real-life events. Tom Hanks stars as James Donovan, an upstanding American insurance lawyer who's assigned to defend a Soviet spy captured in Brooklyn, events that lead to a hostage exchange. Expect occasional swearing (including a couple of "f--k"s during a tense scene, plus "son of a bitch" and "goddamn hell"), a fair amount of era-accurate smoking, celebratory toasting, and some brief, intense violence -- most notably scenes in which a prisoner is harshly interrogated and others in which people are shot while trying to flee East Germany.

7								Cry Freedom
								Rated PG, 1987, 157 Min.
								Common Sense 12+, Parents 8+

Parents need to know Cry Freedom depicts the atrocities committed by South African government authorities during its repressive and inhuman apartheid regime, the country's racist policy that lasted from 1948 to 1994. When the film opened in 1987, it would be another six years before the minority white supremacist government would give way to rule by the black majority, led by imprisoned leader Nelson Mandela. Government police and soldiers massacre unarmed men, women, and children in segregated, impoverished townships. Protest leaders are banned or imprisoned. Language includes "s--t," and "caffer," an ethnic slur used to denigrate blacks. Biko is beaten to death. His bloody body is shown. A man is imprisoned and later falsely reported by the police to have hanged himself. The home of an anti-apartheid editor is shot at by police. A family of black sympathizers are sent child-sized, acid-laced T-shirts by the police. A child's burned face is seen. Briefly shown: A raiding police officer tears off the shirt of a woman. A man beaten into a coma is shown lying face down on the ground, naked. Adults smoke cigarettes and drink alcohol.

8								Thirteen Days
								Rated PG-13, 2000, 145 min.
								Common Sense 14+. Parents 11+

Parents need to know that Thirteen Days, a docudrama about the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, is exciting and suspenseful, even though the actual outcome is well known. The film is a recreation of a crucial incident in American history that's suitable for teens and mature tweens, as well as adults. There's frequent swearing used to heighten the emotional impact (i.e., "bastard," "asshole," "s--t," "Jesus Christ," one use of "f--k"). Because the film is set in the 1960s, smoking is a casual part of many of the meetings in the White House. Alcoholic beverages are consumed in several scenes, never to excess. President John F. Kennedy is seen taking a prescription drug on one occasion.


9                                                                              		Hotel Rwanda
								Rated PG-13, 2004, 115 Min.
								Common Sense 15+, Parents 13+

Parents need to know that this movie includes a realistic, though mostly non-graphic, depiction of genocide and compellingly portrays the sense of horror and insanity. Characters drink, smoke, and use some mild language. 



10                                                                                            Argo
								Rated R, 2012, 120 MIn.
								Common Sense 16+, Parents 13+

Parents need to know that Argo is based on the true story of a daring covert rescue mission, carried out by CIA operative Tony Mendez (played by Ben Affleck, who also directs), during the 1979 Iranian hostage crisis. A few scenes feature unruly mobs and dead bodies, and there are some extremely tense sequences during the escape, but there's not much actual on-screen violence. Other issues include swearing (there's quite a bit, including "f--k" and "s--t") and several scenes that show people smoking and drinking during social occasions.

11                                               				 Charlie Willson’s War                                                  
 								 Rated R, 2007, 97 Min.
Common Sense 16+, Parents 18+

 Parents need to know that this Tom Hanks/Julia Roberts movie is decidedly adult. For starters, it deals with complex issues connected to political wrangling and Middle Eastern power struggles. And then there's the booze, gunfire, and sexual content (including some nudity), strong language (be ready for lots of "f--k"s)-- it's all here and then some. That said, the movie is also smart, with a main character who's infinitely more interesting than many other people in movies. While it's not perfect, it's still a worthy watch, especially for older teens and adults interested in the political process.  							

12								Dark Waters
								Rated PG-13, 2019, 126 MIn.
								Common Sense 14+, Parents 14+

Parents need to know that Dark Waters is a drama based on a 2016 New York Times Magazine article about huge chemical company DuPont knowingly using toxic substances in its billion-dollar products. Mark Ruffalo plays real-life lawyer Robert Bilott, who's trying to fight for the chemical's victims. The movie is harrowing and unsettling but extremely well made and absolutely worth watching. Expect some disturbing images, including sick and dying cows, diseased cow parts, deformities in humans, the shooting of a cow with a rifle (some blood shown), and a house being set on fire. Language is fairly strong, with a couple uses of "f--k," plus "s--t," "goddamn," and more. Teens skinny-dip in one scene, and a bare bottom is briefly seen. There's social drinking at a party and background cigarette smoking.

This class uses:
https://www.oerproject.com/1750-to-Present
https://www.pbs.org
https://www.youtube.com/@TED
https://www.youtube.com/@crashcourse
https://newsela.com/

I use primary source materials (letters, diaries, ledgers, newspapers, pamphlets, ect.) I provide multiple perspectives of the same event with these materials. We discuss how language, morals, and laws have changed over time and we can't apply today's standards to the past. We look at these materials in a historical context. Primary and secondary texts, writings and works of various early religious scholars and people from the various cultures studied.

Zinn, H. (2011). A young people’s history of the United States: Columbus to the War on Terror. Seven Stories Press.
明星教育家
平均評分:4.9評論數量:(37)
教師檔案
For more than 15 years, I've been deeply involved in education, spending the last 9 years as a homeschooling parent. My greatest joy lies in helping students delve into complex subjects by exploring various perspectives. In today's world,... 
團體課

US$17

每週或US$225 用於 14 課程
1x 每週, 14 週
50 分鐘

Completed by 11 learner
即時視訊會議
年齡: 13-18
3-12 每班學員人數

關於
支援
安全隱私加州隱私學習者隱私條款
下載這個軟體
在應用程式商店下載在 Google Play 上取得
© 2024 校外