Topic:
Modernising Non-Fiction

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/08/19/train-derails-northern-india-killing-least-23/
Objectives:
DIRT: Identify your personalized reading target/s
and write them at the top of a new page in your books.
1) Discuss and apply Blumer & Katz Uses &
Gratification Theory to a range of texts.
2) Discuss, analyse and evaluate how the writings
use of; language devices and structure impacts the reader.
3) Evaluation/DIRT: go back over your answers and
highlight/annotate where you have successfully hit your targets.
STARTER
In 1973 Blumer and Katz came up with the Uses and Gratification
theory, arguing that readers consume texts for four key reasons:
·
Entertainment
·
Information
·
Socialisation
·
Relationships
In pairs, discuss where these media texts
would fit into this theory and complete the tables individually for your books.
Blumer & Katz’s 1973 Uses
& Gratification Theory
Reasons for Consuming a Text
|
Example Texts
|
Entertainment
|
|
Information
|
|
Socialisation
(learning about society/ having your values reaffirmed)
|
|
Relationships
(replacing missing relationships like; love/friendship/family)
|
TASK: Put these texts where you
think they fit Blumer and Katz’s categories:
Fiction
novels Broadsheet newspapers Computer games Poems
BBC News Magazines Tabloid newspapers
Fiction
Films Social Media Radio 1 Plays
L7-L9: Also, think about the purpose of a
newspaper. What is the main purpose?
How
does this impact the way the writer writes?
Key Questions:
What is the purpose of the texts?
Why might a reader buy them?
Which
elements of Blumer & Katz theory can be applied to each text?
Can a
text fall into more than one category?
MAIN
PART 1:
DIRT/literacy: Look at their personalized targets from
their previous reading test and write them at the top of a new page. Under the
heading: Non-Fiction Reading Test.
Year 8 Non-Fiction
Reading Test
Q1) Read lines 1-8 of the source
material and list four things the reader learns about the train crash.
(4 marks)
Q2) Look in detail at the headline
and lines 1-19 of the source:
How does
the writer use language here to describe the train crash?
You could
include in writers choice of:
-
words
and phrases (adjectives, semantic fields etc)
-
language
features and techniques (hyperbole, facts/statistics etc.)
-
sentence
forms
(8 marks)
Q3) You need to think about the
source as a whole.
How has the
writer structured the text to interest the reader?
You could
write about:
-
The
headline
-
How
the first two paragraphs contains the 5ws (lots of facts and exaggeration)
-
How
images contribute to the structure/story
-
How
the last five paragraphs seem to shift from informative reporting about the
crash to assertions connoting through detailed other issues in the country.
(8 marks)
Q4) A student wrote, ‘Broadsheets
are trying to entertain readers through using too much hyperbole,’ how far do
you agree with this statement in relation to The Telegraph article?
N.B. you
could start with applying Blumer and Katz’ 1973 theory to the question e.g.
think about the purpose of newspapers and how the current media market might
temp/force newspapers to embrace hyperbole.
In your
answer you could refer to how the writers use of:
-
Semantic
fields
-
Adjectives
-
Assertion
may create
a scandal or panic instead of simply informing the reader.
You could
conclude by giving your view concerning whether or not this article uses too
much hyperbole to entertain readers through shock value and macabre voyeurism
along with your view on whether news should be more tightly regulated.
(20 marks)
How To Get L6-L9 On Long Answer Questions
L7-L9 Language Paper 1 & 2 Check
List
Points/arguments that are original and show a clear
understanding of the question.
Evidence from the text/theory
quotes.
Explain how the writer’s choices
(language/structure/narrative/characterisation/themes) impact the reader.
Link every point clearly back to the question using
the same language/words the question does to leave the examiner in no doubt
your are sticking to the point.
|
|
Complex subject specific
vocabulary (to
show off how able you are).
|
|
SPAG accurate spelling, punctuation and grammar (use
compound and complex sentences, embed quotes using the correct punctuation).
|
|
Make enough points/use enough evidence from the text
to cover all the marks available.
|
Revise Language Devises
that are common
conventions of non-fiction (remind pupils to refer to these where appropriate)
e.g. FEAR
Facts
(use of statistics etc.)
Exaggeration
(hyperbole, scandalous language – adjectives, semantic fields etc.) In test,
you could link to Blumer & Katz here – exploring whether or not broadsheets
should try to be ‘entertaining’ (Blumer & Katz, 1973) or whether they
should stick to the facts.
Assertion
(journalist somehow putting across their own view)
Rhetorical
questions.
Main Part 2
Work individually to complete the
non-fiction reading test; making sure you work on hitting your personal targets.
PLENARY
Pupils will self-assess their work through highlighting
where they have hit their main targets so I/and they can see how/where they
have improved.

