October assessment learner response
WWW - Good level of detail in answers.
EBI - Don't drift away from specific examples from the text plus effect on the audience.
Q3: I used the wrong terminology for the different ways to interact with the media.
Q4: I incorrectly assumed the target audience would be that of a film.
Q5: I was incorrect with my understanding of title placement.
Q6: I did not mention all the effective conventions of the film poster on Figure 2. (Typography, Colour palette, Website link etc.)
Q8: I did not mention the tagline level with the boy in Figure 3's eyes.
Q9: Charities use pictures of children in advertisements as they invoke more sympathy on consumers than adults as they are living a rough life in a place of vulnerability at a young age. In addition, adults and and parents will see this advert and feel pity for the child as they would not like for their children to be treated in such a way. The producers can use this elicited poignancy and maternal instinct to persuade their target audience to donate to their cause.
The "Dig toilets, not graves" advertisement denotes a boy dressed in a tattered blue shirt with a faded design on the front, sat upon a simple mahogany chair in front of a beige clay wall with the sun beating down on him. The background is blurred to bring focus on the foreground, more precisely the boy, and the message is clearly stated to his right in bold white letters.
EBI - Don't drift away from specific examples from the text plus effect on the audience.
- 1/1
- 1/1
- 1/2
- 1/2
- 0/3
- 2/3
- 2/2
- 3/4
- 4/8
Q3: I used the wrong terminology for the different ways to interact with the media.
Q4: I incorrectly assumed the target audience would be that of a film.
Q5: I was incorrect with my understanding of title placement.
Q6: I did not mention all the effective conventions of the film poster on Figure 2. (Typography, Colour palette, Website link etc.)
Q8: I did not mention the tagline level with the boy in Figure 3's eyes.
Q9: Charities use pictures of children in advertisements as they invoke more sympathy on consumers than adults as they are living a rough life in a place of vulnerability at a young age. In addition, adults and and parents will see this advert and feel pity for the child as they would not like for their children to be treated in such a way. The producers can use this elicited poignancy and maternal instinct to persuade their target audience to donate to their cause.
The "Dig toilets, not graves" advertisement denotes a boy dressed in a tattered blue shirt with a faded design on the front, sat upon a simple mahogany chair in front of a beige clay wall with the sun beating down on him. The background is blurred to bring focus on the foreground, more precisely the boy, and the message is clearly stated to his right in bold white letters.

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