Get the best experience in our app
Enjoy offline reading, category favourites, and instant updates - right from your pocket.

How cinema can help to reach vulnerable learners

Teachers are just beginning to realise the full power of film education in engaging pupils, says Jamie Chambers
10th December 2020, 12:58pm

Share

How cinema can help to reach vulnerable learners

/magazine/archived/how-cinema-can-help-reach-vulnerable-learners
Film Education: How Cinema Can Help To Reach Vulnerable Learners In Schools

The world of cinema has an underrated ability to help reach pupils who might be struggling with most aspects of school. Let me explain.

A series of new essaysÌýin the , exploring projects in places from inner-city Glasgow to rural Chile, has suggested that working with film may provide valuable new ways of reaching vulnerable and hard-to-reach learners.

Writing about their work , teachers Michael Daly and Jacqueline Thomson have recently been exploring ways in which film could be placed at the heart of an alternative curriculum for some of their most vulnerable learners. Daly and Thomson describe how the relevance and power that film already holds for young learners can unite diverse aspects of the curriculum, showing howÌýa film such as can help to energise and link a series of diverse tasks that students might otherwise struggle to engage with.


Related: Film should play a bigger part in pupils’ education

Interview:ÌýMark Cousins onÌýwhy cinema should feature in lessons more often

Film education:ÌýWhen a Hollywood star came to school

Movie time:Ìý5Ìýfilms teachers should show at the end of term

Scare tactics:ÌýHorror films gaining popularity in English courses


Elsewhere, Felipe CorreaÌýhas written of the place of film education , which seekÌýto reintegrate young people with learning disabilities back into school education. Correa discusses how encounters with cinema, and the different ways of seeing our surroundings that arise from an understanding of cinema (and, crucially, from the opportunity to experiment with a camera), can lead to a greater awareness of and engagement with the world around us.

Film education: Engaging vulnerable students

Describing his work with Cinema en Curso (a project initially developed in Barcelona), Correa showsÌýhow he encourages his film students - through the making of a short documentary -Ìýto build relationships with traditional craftsmen and artisans, who are then able to model to students patient approaches to creative craftsmanship motivated by the pride one is ultimately able to take in one’s work.

Also in Chile, Alicia VegaÌýwrites about her experiences running film workshops for nearly 30 years. For Vega, the shared experience of cinema can be a highly positive focus for even the most vulnerable of children. In her account of experiences delivering workshops in both rural and urban settings, Vega highlights the ways in which film education frequently leads to parallel steps forward that young learners are able to make in their sense of self-confidence and self-efficacy. Ìý

I have witnessed similarly remarkable moments in my own work as a film education practitioner in Scottish classrooms, where engagements with film have led to significant leaps forward in children’s development. In , for example, a Primary 7 student who made a strong engagement with practical filmmaking work - directing and starring in his own film - simultaneously made big progressÌýelsewhere in his studies, to the extent that his teacher later told me his reading age had leapt forward three years in only three months. Ìý

As all of the above show,Ìýwe are only just beginning to realise the full power of film education for vulnerable learners.

Jamie ChambersÌýis the founding editor of theÌýFilm Education JournalÌý(@filmeducationj on Twitter) and organisedÌý

You need a Tes subscription to read this article

Subscribe now to read this article and get other subscriber-only content:

/per month for 12 months
  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Award-winning email newsletters
  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Award-winning email newsletters

You need a subscription to read this article

Subscribe now to read this article and get other subscriber-only content, including:

/per month for 12 months
  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Award-winning email newsletters
  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Award-winning email newsletters
Recent
Most read
Most shared