pptx, 5.18 MB
pptx, 5.18 MB
pdf, 3.33 MB
pdf, 3.33 MB

A complete OCR A-Level Media Studies lesson analysing The Guardian and Daily Mail set newspaper texts, with a printable PDF resource.

This fully editable PowerPoint (.pptx) lesson focuses on the OCR A-Level Media Studies News & Online / Newspapers set texts for Paper 1 Section A, supporting students in analysing The Guardian and The Daily Mail front pages.

The lesson recaps key newspaper knowledge, including newspaper type, ownership, political alignment and editorial influence, before guiding students into a detailed analysis of the set texts. Students consider how media language, representation, political and social contexts, audience and purpose shape meaning across the two newspapers.

The lesson uses an I Do / We Do / You Do structure to model analysis before students complete their own front page analysis. It includes teacher modelling on the Daily Mail, focusing on headline construction, typography, authority, urgency and political bias. Students are then guided to apply the same approach to both set texts.

This resource includes a printable PDF front page analysis resource, allowing students to annotate, structure and develop their analysis of the OCR newspaper set products.

This lesson covers:

OCR A-Level Media Studies
Paper 1 Section A: News & Online
Newspapers
The Guardian
Daily Mail
OCR set texts
Newspaper front page analysis
Media language
Representation
Political context
Social context
Audience and purpose
Ownership
Scott Trust Limited
DMGT
Political alignment
Left-wing and right-wing newspapers
Newspaper ideology
Headline analysis
Typography
Layout and composition
Political bias
Set product revision
A-Level exam preparation

What is included:

Fully editable PowerPoint (.pptx) lesson
Printable PDF front page analysis resource
Do Now retrieval task on The Guardian and Daily Mail
Teacher feedback/model answer slide
Lesson objectives
Recap of OCR A-Level newspaper set texts
Ownership recap for The Guardian and Daily Mail
Political alignment recap
I Do / We Do / You Do set text analysis structure
Model analysis of Daily Mail headline construction
Model analysis of typography, capitalisation and authority
Political bias analysis task
Model analysis of Boris Johnson framing in the Daily Mail
Student analysis task for The Guardian and Daily Mail set texts
Prompts for media language, representation, political/social contexts, audience and purpose
Theorist link prompts
Political alignment mini plenary

This resource can be used as:

A full A-Level lesson on OCR newspaper set text analysis
A Paper 1 Section A: News & Online lesson
A lesson comparing The Guardian and Daily Mail
A revision lesson for OCR A-Level newspaper set products
A front page annotation and analysis lesson

Get this resource as part of a bundle and save up to 36%

A bundle is a package of resources grouped together to teach a particular topic, or a series of lessons, in one place.

Bundle

OCR A Level Newspapers Bundle

A complete OCR A-Level Media Studies Newspapers bundle covering News & Online, newspaper forms, mastheads, theory, contexts, economics, regulation and set text analysis. This bundle contains 7 fully editable PowerPoint lessons for the OCR A-Level Media Studies News & Online / Newspapers topic for Paper 1 Section A. The lessons are designed to build students’ knowledge step-by-step, beginning with an introduction to newspapers and ending with detailed set text analysis of The Guardian and The Daily Mail. The bundle supports students in understanding newspaper forms, tabloid and broadsheet conventions, mastheads, political bias, semiotics, audience interpretation, economic factors, regulation, press freedom and OCR set text analysis. It is suitable for Year 12 or Year 13 A-Level Media Studies and can be used as a full sequence of lessons, revision unit, intervention pack or exam preparation resource. The lessons include structured classroom tasks, retrieval practice, teacher feedback slides, model answers, sentence starters, exam-style questions, printable analysis resources and scaffolded writing support. Suggested teaching order Lesson 1: Introduction to Newspapers Introduces the OCR A-Level Newspapers / News & Online topic. Students explore newspaper types, tabloids, broadsheets, political affiliation, regulation, online news and the role of newspapers in shaping public opinion. Lesson 2: Newspaper Mastheads Focuses on newspaper front page conventions and masthead analysis. Students explore how mastheads communicate brand identity, audience positioning, political ideology and representation through typography, colour, logo, tone and layout. Lesson 3: Semiotics & Social Contexts Applies Barthes’ semiotics to newspaper front pages. Students analyse signs, denotation, connotation, anchorage and myth, while linking newspaper media language to political and social contexts. Lesson 4: Stuart Hall and Reception Theory Explores Hall’s Reception Theory and applies dominant/preferred, negotiated and oppositional readings to newspapers. Students consider how audiences decode political messages differently depending on values, identity and ideology. Lesson 5: Economic Factors Compares the funding models of The Guardian and The Daily Mail. Students explore reader-funded journalism, advertising revenue, editorial independence, click-driven content, sensationalism and public-interest reporting. Lesson 6: Newspaper Regulation Explores newspaper regulation, press freedom, IPSO, Ofcom, Leveson, phone hacking, Hillsborough reporting, MPs’ expenses and Edward Snowden/WikiLeaks. Students evaluate whether newspapers need greater regulation to protect the public. Lesson 7: Newspaper Set Text Analysis Final lesson in the sequence, focusing directly on OCR set text analysis of The Guardian and The Daily Mail. Students apply knowledge of media language, representation, political/social contexts, audience, purpose, ownership and political bias. This lesson also includes a printable PDF front page analysis resource. What is included? 7 fully editable PowerPoint (.pptx) lessons Printable PDF front page analysis resource Do Now retrieval activities Teacher feedback/model answer slides Lesson objectives Key terminology explanations Tabloid and broadsheet comparison Newspaper convention tasks Masthead analysis activities Political affiliation tasks Semiotics and Barthes theory application Reception Theory and Stuart Hall application Dominant, negotiated and oppositional reading tasks Economic factors and funding model comparison Reader-funded vs advertising-funded journalism tasks Regulation and press freedom case studies IPSO, Ofcom and Leveson content Case-study evidence for phone hacking, Hillsborough, MPs’ expenses and Snowden/WikiLeaks Source analysis tasks Sentence starters and writing frames Exam-style questions Model paragraphs and extended model responses Mini plenaries and self-assessment tasks Key topics covered OCR A-Level Media Studies Paper 1 Section A: News & Online Newspapers The Guardian Daily Mail Newspaper set texts Tabloids and broadsheets Red-top tabloids Mid-market tabloids Quality newspapers Newspaper mastheads Media language Representation Political context Social context Audience and purpose Political bias Ideology Barthes’ semiotics Stuart Hall’s Reception Theory Denotation and connotation Myth and anchorage Dominant/preferred reading Negotiated reading Oppositional reading Economic factors Funding models Reader-funded journalism Advertising revenue Editorial independence Sensationalism Newspaper regulation Press freedom IPSO Ofcom Leveson Inquiry Phone hacking scandal Hillsborough reporting MPs’ expenses scandal Edward Snowden/WikiLeaks OCR exam preparation This bundle can be used as: A complete A-Level Newspapers teaching sequence A Paper 1 Section A: News & Online unit A revision bundle for The Guardian and The Daily Mail A Year 12 or Year 13 newspaper topic pack A theory application sequence A media language and representation unit A media industries and regulation revision pack A structured OCR exam preparation resource A cover or intervention sequence for A-Level Media Studies This bundle includes fully editable PowerPoint (.pptx) lessons and a printable PDF front page analysis resource. This resource is independently created and is not endorsed by OCR.

£28.00

Reviews

Something went wrong, please try again later.

This resource hasn't been reviewed yet

To ensure quality for our reviews, only customers who have purchased this resource can review it

Report this resourceto let us know if it violates our terms and conditions.
Our customer service team will review your report and will be in touch.