pptx, 32.56 MB
pptx, 32.56 MB
docx, 484.23 KB
docx, 484.23 KB

A complete OCR A-Level Media Studies lesson analysing intertextuality in The Big Issue, with a supporting exam worksheet.

This fully editable PowerPoint (.pptx) lesson focuses on The Big Issue for OCR A-Level Media Studies Component 1, Section B: Media Messages, supporting students with media language, representation, contexts and intertextual analysis.

The lesson explores how The Big Issue uses intertextual references on its “Class Action: What’s School For?” education cover to create deeper meaning and social critique. Students identify and analyse references including Grange Hill, Ozzy Osbourne, Benedict Cumberbatch, Flashman, Harry Potter, The Handmaid’s Tale, Jean Brodie, Pink Floyd’s The Wall and the Finnish education system.

Students consider how these references help The Big Issue question the purpose of education, authority, individuality, creativity, rebellion and social reform. The lesson builds towards a 15-mark exam-style response on why The Big Issue has used an intertextual approach, with prompts covering meaning, audience engagement, nostalgia, social critique, alternative perspectives and social contexts.

This resource also includes a supporting intertextuality worksheet focused on the same Big Issue education cover. The worksheet includes a Do Now, prompts for each intertextual reference, and the full 15-mark exam question.

This lesson covers:

OCR A-Level Media Studies
Component 1: Media Messages
Section B: Magazines
The Big Issue
Intertextuality
Media language
Representation
Social contexts
Education reform
Alternative perspectives
Audience engagement
Nostalgia
Social critique
Cultural references
Grange Hill
Pink Floyd’s The Wall
Harry Potter
The Handmaid’s Tale
Jean Brodie
Flashman
Finland education system
15-mark exam response

What is included:

Fully editable PowerPoint (.pptx) lesson
Supporting intertextuality worksheet
Do Now task identifying intertextual references
Teacher feedback/model answer slide
Lesson objectives
Key term definition of intertextuality
Reference slides for Grange Hill, Ozzy Osbourne, Benedict Cumberbatch, Flashman, Harry Potter, The Handmaid’s Tale, Jean Brodie and Pink Floyd
Finland education system comparison
Exam-style 15-mark question
Word bank for intertextual analysis
Prompt questions linked to education reform and alternative perspectives
Extended model response
Mini plenary on intertextuality

This resource can be used as:

A full OCR A-Level lesson on The Big Issue
A Component 1 Section B magazine lesson
A media language and contexts lesson
An intertextuality analysis lesson
A 15-mark exam practice lesson
A revision or intervention lesson
A Year 12 or Year 13 Media Studies lesson

This resource is provided as a fully editable PowerPoint (.pptx) file and includes a supporting worksheet/resource document.

This resource is independently created and is not endorsed by OCR.

Get this resource as part of a bundle and save up to 37%

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 Magazines & Big Issue Bundle

A complete OCR A-Level Media Studies magazine bundle covering magazine conventions, audiences, The Big Issue, intertextuality, representation, comparative analysis and practical front cover design. This bundle contains 6 fully editable PowerPoint (.pptx) lessons for OCR A-Level Media Studies Component 1, Section B: Media Messages, focusing on magazines, media language and representation. The lessons are designed to build knowledge logically, starting with magazine conventions and audience theory before moving into The Big Issue as the set magazine text. Students explore mastheads, cover lines, typography, colour, layout, denotation, connotation, target audience, Maslow, Reception Theory, Uses and Gratifications, social enterprise, pluralistic representation, intertextuality and comparative analysis. The bundle includes editable PowerPoint lessons, worksheet resources, guidance documents, modelling, key terminology, printable-style activities, practical design tasks, exam-style questions, sentence starters, word banks and peer feedback opportunities. This resource is ideal for Year 12 or Year 13 OCR A-Level Media Studies students studying magazines in Component 1: Media Messages, Section B. Suggested teaching order Lesson 1: Magazine Introduction Introduces magazine conventions, consumer magazine types, general interest and specialist magazines, mastheads, main images, cover lines, typography, colour schemes, puff, pug, direct gaze and skyline/banner. Students analyse magazine covers and create their own front cover sketch. Lesson 2: Magazine Audiences Explores why audiences read magazines using Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs, Stuart Hall’s Reception Theory and Uses and Gratifications. Students analyse different audience responses to magazine covers and compare lifestyle magazines. Lesson 3: The Big Issue Introduction Introduces The Big Issue, its social enterprise model, street vendors, social justice ethos, independent publication status, ABC1 target audience, pluralistic representation and political/social values. Students complete keyword tasks, audience profiling and front cover analysis. Lesson 4: The Big Issue Intertextuality Focuses on the Big Issue “Class Action: What’s School For?” education cover and its use of intertextuality. Students explore references to Grange Hill, Pink Floyd’s The Wall, Harry Potter, The Handmaid’s Tale, Jean Brodie, Ozzy Osbourne, Benedict Cumberbatch, Flashman and the Finnish education system. Includes a worksheet and 15-mark exam practice. Lesson 5: Design Your Own Big Issue Cover A practical production lesson where students design their own Big Issue-style front cover using Canva. Students apply media language, intertextuality, representation, pluralistic values, social enterprise ethos and target audience knowledge to a contemporary political/social issue. Lesson 6: The Big Issue Comparative Analysis A structured comparative analysis lesson using two Big Issue front covers. Students compare media language, representation, intertextuality, social/political contexts and pluralistic values. Includes a comparative worksheet PDF and a guidance document with sentence starters, word banks, prompts and conclusion support. What is included? 6 fully editable PowerPoint (.pptx) lessons Supporting worksheet resources Comparative worksheet PDF Intertextuality worksheet Student guidance document Magazine terminology and conventions tasks Do Now retrieval tasks Teacher feedback/model answer slides Key theory slides Magazine cover analysis tasks Big Issue set text context Practical Canva design task Comparative analysis structure Sentence starters Word banks Exam-style questions Peer feedback tasks Key topics covered OCR A-Level Media Studies Component 1: Media Messages Section B: Magazines Magazine conventions Media language Representation Audience The Big Issue Social enterprise model Street vendors ABC1 audience Pluralistic representation Intertextuality Social, cultural and political contexts Masthead Main image Cover lines Typography Layout Colour scheme Denotation and connotation Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Stuart Hall’s Reception Theory Uses and Gratifications Comparative analysis Exam practice This bundle can be used as: A complete OCR A-Level magazine teaching sequence A Component 1 Section B magazine unit A Big Issue set text teaching pack A media language and representation unit A revision or intervention bundle A cover lesson sequence with supporting worksheets A Year 12 or Year 13 exam preparation resource This bundle includes fully editable PowerPoint (.pptx) lessons and supporting worksheet/resource documents. This resource is independently created and is not endorsed by OCR.

£19.99

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