Title: Animated Learning
1Animated Learning
- Dr. Chris Abbott
- Reader in e-Inclusion
- Kings College London
- chris.abbott_at_kcl.ac.uk
2Animation a unique art form The Animated
Learning project Reading animation learning
outcomes Activity Genre knowledge Making
animation learning outcomes Some case studies
3Animation a unique art form
The Saga of Biorn
4Animation is a seductive and accessible medium
which has developed over more than one hundred
years. In the last thirty years, the
technologies of animation production have become
democratised, making them available to much
larger numbers of people, including students in
schools. ...and as such, this work is part of
the developing range of literacy practices
available to learners
5Animation (even very simple animation) can help
us to access complex texts...
Ken Robinson on Changing Education Paradigms
6One froggy evening (1955)
- 7 minutes
- the Citizen Kane of animated film (Spielberg)
- Uses mythic/folk tale motifs
- Time-shift to the future
- Repeating plot device
7The animated learning project
8Animated Learning (EU project)
Led by the VIA University College, Denmark an
international centre for the education of
animators Partners from other parts of Denmark
(Danish Pedagogical University, Viborg Commune)
as well as Estonia (Kinobuss) and UK (Kings
College London). Project runs from 2010 to 2011
but may be extended Series of publications
available from early 2012. Project details
9Reading animationlearning outcomes
10Reading animation
Leads to enhanced understanding of narrative
conventions and structure, as well as genre,
characterisation, media and language
11And it has been suggested that, far from being an
instigator of violence, cartoon aggression may be
helpful in building the capacity to
discriminate (Hodge Tripp)
12Activity genre knowledge
13- What happened to Biorn?
- He got to Valhalla
- He ended up in Hallheim
- He didnt die.
- He ended up somewhere else.
14Making animationlearning outcomes
Word steps (Denmark)
15Enables those for whom text is challenging to
present complex stories using metaphor, genre
knowledge and allusion.
16Contributes to moving image literacy and a model
of moving image grammar (Burn Parker)
17Illuminates and reveals power discourses (Mills,
Australia) and builds process language through
animation as a group task
18Can be seen as part of a process of semiotic
production discourse, design, production,
distribution (Kress van Leeuwen)
19Storyboarding as a combination of writing and
visual design
Skabelsesberetningenbauneskole (Denmark)
20The central role of editing (as with text)
21Some case studies
22Animation and autism
Can animation pedagogy support or even develop
social interaction? Can it help teachers
understand students with ASD Can students with
ASD communicate more effectively through
animation?
23Animation and dyslexia
Ordblind (Denmark)
24Animation and language diversity
Adding sound to an animated film as a literacy
event
25Animation and disaffection/disadvantage
Nicholas Kallincos, Australia http//www.picnick.
com.au/
26...there is a need to identify the nature of the
scaffolding and adult support children need as
they create multimodal, digital texts... The
creation of appropriate pedagogical and
curricular approaches can only occur through
detailed analyses of classroom projects which
trace the skills, knowledge and understanding
developed in media production. There is a large
body of work which outlines what is known about
young childrens print-based literacy skills...
There is now an urgent need to begin to map out
similar terrain in relation to multimodal
communicative practices... (Marsh)
27References
Abbott, C. (1990). Children, animated film and
language learning. Unpublished MA, Institute of
Education, London. Burn, A., Parker, D. (2001).
Making your mark digital inscription, animation
and a new visual semiotic. Education,
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London Continuum. Burn, A., Parker, D.
(2003b). Tiger's Big Plan Multimodality and the
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Lang. Burn, A., Durran, J. (2007). Media
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