WebQuest
MUSICAL ART WARS
Teacher Page

Florida Sunshine Standards (
States
Visual Arts:
Aesthetic and Critical Analysis
(VA.D.1.4)
Applications to Life (VA.E.1.4)
Language Arts:
Listening, Viewing, and Speaking
(LA.C.1.4)
The Student Uses Viewing Strategies Effectively (LA.C.2.4)
The
Student Uses Speaking Strategies Effectively (LA.C.3.4)
Student Uses Writing
Processes Correctly (LA.B.1.4)
The Student Writes to Communicate Ideas and
Information Effectively (LA.B.2.4)
Music:
Aesthetic and Critical Analysis
The student listens to, analyzes, and describes music (MU.D.1.4)
The student evaluates music and music performance (MU.D.2.4)
Applications to Life
The student understands the relationship between music and the world beyond the school setting (MU.E.2.4)
The cooperative learning aspect of
the lesson will help address some the needs of diverse learners. The video
clips will also support this.
You might want to set the stage by
having Star Wars movie props to decorate the class.
beauty of loneliness of pain: of strength and freedom. The beauty of
disappointment and never-satisfied love. The cruel beauty of
nature and everlasting beauty of monotony."
-Benjamin Britten
CUE: A short piece of music written and performed in relation to one of a film's scenes or segments. All the cues together make up the film's score.
LEITMOTIF: A short musical phrase representing and recurring with a character, situation or emotion. The device derives from 19th-century opera.
SONG SCORE: When songs completely or principally make up a film's musical score.
SPOTTING SESSION: A meeting between the composer, the producer and the director where they decide how and when to use music in the film. Usually the composer does not begin to work until after the spotting session.
Retrieved from: http://www.oscars.org/education-outreach/teachersguide/sound/pdf/sound_act4.pdf
-Arthur C. Clarke
is a list of special effect terminology and the history of special effects in films to help you implement this WebQuest.
SPECIAL EFFECTS (Often abbreviated as SFX, SPFX, or simply FX): Artistic video effects used to enhance a video
production or simulate imagined events for creating drama, enhancing the mood or furthering the
story. Special effects may vary from the limited addition of patterns or
the mixing of several video images together, to sophisticated digital
effects such as picture compression, page flipping and three-dimensional
effects. Special effects are usually created using SEGs.
SEG: (Special Effects Generator): Device designed to generate special
effects. The simplest devices process a single video signal, change its
color, generate sepia tones, invert the picture to a negative, posterize
the image and fade or break up the image into various patterns. More
sophisticated equipment uses several video sources, computer-generated
graphics and sophisticated animation with digital effects.
BLUE-SCREEN PHOTOGRAPHY (also green-screen): Technique of filming a subject in front of a blue- or green-screen; the blue or green background is then removed through optical or digital processes, allowing the subject, or element, to be isolated for compositing with another element. Often characters are filmed with a blue-screen in order to place them in a different scene, or on a miniature set.
CGI (Computer Generated Imagery): Images created with the use of a computer. Also called computer graphics (CG), computer animation, or digital animation.
ANIMATRONICS: Puppets of human, animal, or creature form controlled by an operator manually or remotely via electronic or radio control.
The earliest effects were produced within the camera (in-camera effects), such as simple jump-cuts or superimpositions, or were created by using miniatures, back projection, or matte paintings. Optical effects came slightly later, using film, light, shadow, lenses and/or chemical processes to produce the film effects. Film titles, fades, dissolves, wipes, blow ups, skip frames, bluescreen, compositing, double exposures, and zooms/pans are examples of various optical effects. Cel animation, scale modeling, claymation, digital compositing, animatronics, use of prosthetic makeup, morphing, and modern computer-generated or computer graphics imagery (CGI) are just some of the more modern techniques that are widely used for creating incredible special or visual effects.
Retrieved from: http://www.ardenwoodsnd-dvd.com/glossary/glossary_s.html
Retrieved from: http://www.filmsite.org/visualeffects.html
Retrieved from: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/specialfx2/glossary.html
The Public URL for this WebQuest:
http://zunal.com/webquest.php?w=73513
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