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Activity 4: 60 minutes
Aim
To understand the ways in which news stories are constructed.
Objectives
Resources
Tasks
Note: This would make a good literacy-focused lesson.
Discussion Points
Extension
Students should identify the reporter's views on football violence in the 'Hooligans' Bark' article (
Core Activity Sheet 4.1
) without the help of
Core Activity Sheet 4.2
.
Differentiation
Students use the writing frameworks on
Core Activity Sheet 4.4
and
Core Activity Sheet 4.5
to help them construct their own article.
OR
Students write their own news reports on the match from a biased perspective, using the information from the 'Hooligan's Bark' article (
Core Activity Sheet 4.1
) and adding some imaginative material of their own.
Homework
Use the students' own biased reports and the 'Hooligans' Bark' article (
Core Activity Sheet 4.1
) to conduct a survey. The students' own articles will need to be photocopied, or the pupils could work in pairs (one good representation / one bad). Ask friends / family to read each of the three types of article and then rank the significance of football violence 1 to 10. Was there a difference in their responses depending on the articles read? Follow this up with a discussion on the power of suggestion and influence of the media.
National Curriculum Focus
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