Overview
Children and Media focuses on how children up to the age of thirteen encounter and employ the media and genres of storytelling: from oral narrative and print, to the audio and visual mediation of narrative in picture books, radio and other audio forms, and screen technologies such as television, film, and video games. The course applies contemporary theory and methodology to examine narrative and considers the competencies, or “literacies,” that children develop in order to understand narrative and produce their own.
Objectives
Children and Media is intended to
- Help students apply the concepts of narrative theory to the study of how children receive and use narrative across a variety of media.
- Define and explain various types of literacy that children have developed as they experience narratives in various formats, including oral, written, aural, visual, and multimedia.
- Explain how children’s competencies with narrative and various media are connected to the changing social constructions of childhood and the changing educational outcomes intended for children.
- Help students understand how children make sense of the world through the social and intellectual tools at their disposal.
- Explain salient characteristics of oral, aural, print, visual, material, and digital culture as they affect children’s engagement with stories and storytelling.
- Assist students in analyzing and assessing the likely effectiveness of media products and educational resources for children through an examination of how they use narrative.
Evaluation
To receive credit for CMNS 420, students must complete all assignments and obtain a minimum composite course grade of D (50 percent). The weighting of the composite mark is as follows:
Activity | Weight |
Assignment 1: Blog Entry | 10% |
Assignment 2: Short Descriptive Essay—Narrative and Literacy | 25% |
Research Essay | 40% |
Assignment 4: Short Synthesis Essay—Electronic Media | 25% |
Total | 100% |
To learn more about assignments and examinations, please refer to Athabasca University’s online Calendar.
Materials
This course either does not have a course package or the textbooks are open-source material and available to students at no cost. This course has a Course Administration and Technology Fee, but students are not charged the Course Materials Fee.
All of the course materials for this course can be accessed via the online course site.
Challenge for credit
Overview
The challenge for credit process allows you to demonstrate that you have acquired a command of the general subject matter, knowledge, intellectual and/or other skills that would normally be found in a university-level course.
Full information about challenge for credit can be found in the Undergraduate Calendar.
Evaluation
To receive credit for the CMNS 420 challenge registration, you must achieve a grade of at least D (50 percent) on the examination.
Activity | Weight |
Two Essays | 2 x 15% |
Challenge Exam | 70% |
Total | 100% |
Challenge for credit course registration form