"

Lesson: Colour a Picture

In this lesson, students students learn about how visual media use colour. They compare black-and-white to colour photos and consider what colour “says,” then watch a short film and analyze the different ways it uses colour. They then consider the representation of skin colour in that video and how the two ideas of “colour” relate to one another. Finally, students choose how to colour a black-and-white photo to achieve a particular visual or emotional effect.

Grade range: 1-3

Teacher Material: https://pressbooks.pub/buildingblocks/chapter/pleasantville/

Student Material: https://pressbooks.pub/buildingblocks/chapter/pleasantville-2/

Time Frame

One class period (30 minutes) Two or three class periods (60-90 minutes) Extended Unit  
Activities  

Pleasantville

Frames

Colour in Movies

Colourize a Photograph

 

 

 

 

Pleasantville

Frames

Colour in Movies

Talking Colour

Colourize a Photograph

Wacky Media Songs

 

 

Pleasantville

Frames

Colour in Movies

Talking Colour

Colourize a Photograph

Wacky Media Songs: You Do You!

 

Preparation:

  • Make sure that you are able to show the embedded videos or that students are able to access the links.

Learning Outcomes

Big ideas/key concepts: Students will understand that…

Media are constructions

  • Media makers make conscious choices about how to use media techniques, such as colour

Each medium has a unique aesthetic form

  • Colour is an important rule of notice in visual media

Media have social and political implications

  • Visual representations of diversity, including skin colour, influence how we see other and ourselves

Key questions:

  • How do media makers choose to use colour?
  • How does the way characters’ skin colour is shown affect how we see them and ourselves?

Essential knowledge: Students will know…

  • Reading media:  Different ways that media makers use colour to achieve particular effects
  • Media representation: Words like “Black” and “White” may not match the actual colours of people’s skin, but instead describe where their families came from
  • Making and remixing: Effective use of colour for particular effects in images

Essential vocabulary: Greyscale

Performance tasks: Students will be able to…

  • Use: Colour an image to achieve an artistic or emotional effect
  • Understand: Analyze the use of colour in images and videos
  • Engage: Begin to consider the impact of representation in media

Curriculum  Connections

Strand A: Literacy Connections and Applications

A2. Digital Media Literacy

A2.4 Forms, Conventions and Techniques

demonstrate an understanding of the forms, conventions, and techniques of digital and media texts, and apply this understanding when analyzing texts

A2.5 Media, Audience, and Production

demonstrate an understanding of the interrelationships between the form, message, and context of a text, the audience, and the creator

A2.6 Innovation and Design

use digital and media tools to support stages of the design process and to develop creative solutions to authentic, real-world problems

A2.7 Community and Cultural Awareness

communicate and collaborate with various communities in a safe, respectful, responsible, and inclusive manner when using online platforms and environments, including digital and media tools, and demonstrate cultural awareness with members of the community

A3. Applications, Connections and Contributions

A3.2 Identity and Community

demonstrate an understanding of the contributions, lived experiences, and perspectives of a diversity of individuals and communities, including those in Canada, by exploring the concepts of identity, self, and sense of belonging in culturally responsive and relevant texts

 

Strand C: Composition (Understanding and Responding to Texts)

C1 Knowledge About Texts

C1.2 Text Forms and Genres

Grade 1: identify simple literary and informational text forms and their associated genres

Grade 2: identify and describe some characteristics of literary and informational text forms and their associated genres

Grade 3: identify and describe some characteristics of literary and informational text forms and their associated genres

C1.4 Visual Elements of Texts

Grade 1: demonstrate an understanding of the relationship between simple illustrations, images, and graphics and the text

Grade 2: identify ways in which images, graphics, and visual design create, communicate, and contribute to meaning in a variety of texts

Grade 3: describe ways in which images, graphics, and visual design are used in a given text, and demonstrate an understanding of their purpose and connection to the content of the text

C1.5 Elements of Style

Grade 1: identify some simple elements of style in texts, including voice, word choice, word patterns, and sentence structure, and describe how they help communicate meaning

Grade 2:  identify some simple elements of style in texts, including voice, word choice, word patterns, and sentence structure, and explain how they help communicate meaning

Grade 3: identify some elements of style in texts, including voice, word choice, word patterns, and sentence structure, and explain how they help communicate meaning

C3 Critical Thinking in Literacy

C3.2 Making Inferences

Grade 1:  make simple inferences, using stated and implied information and ideas, to understand simple texts

Grade 2: make simple inferences using stated and implied information and ideas to understand simple texts

Grade 3: make inferences using stated and implied information and ideas to understand texts

C3.3 Analyzing Texts

Grade 1: analyze simple texts, including literary and informational texts, by identifying and sequencing important information and events

Grade 2: analyze simple texts, including literary and informational texts, by identifying and sequencing important information, and comparing and contrasting simple elements

Grade 3: analyze various texts, including literary and informational texts, by identifying main and supporting ideas, sequencing information, and comparing and contrasting elements

C3.4 Analyzing Cultural Elements of Texts

Grade 1: identify some cultural elements represented in various texts, including symbols and values, and explain how these elements contribute to the meaning

Grade 2:  identify some cultural elements represented in various texts, including symbols, language, and values, and pose questions and share ideas about how these elements contribute to the meaning

Grade 3:  identify some cultural elements represented in various texts, including symbols, language, and values, and pose questions and share ideas about how these elements contribute to the meaning

C3.5 Perspectives within Texts

Grade 1:  identify explicit and implicit perspectives communicated in a text, and describe how these perspectives could influence an audience

Grade 2:  identify explicit and implicit perspectives communicated in a text, providing evidence, and describe how these perspectives could influence an audience

Grade 3:  identify explicit and implicit perspectives communicated in texts, providing evidence, and explain how these perspectives could influence an audience

C3.6 Analysis and Response

Grades 1-2:  express personal thoughts and feelings about ideas presented in texts, such as ideas about diversity, inclusion, and accessibility

Grade 3: describe personal thoughts and feelings about ideas presented in texts, such as ideas about diversity, inclusion, and accessibility

 

Strand D: Composition (Expressing Ideas and Creating Texts)

D2 Creating Texts

D2.1 Producing Drafts

Grade 1: draft short, simple texts of various forms and genres, including personal narratives, persuasive texts, and procedural texts, using a variety of media, tools, and strategies

Grade 2: draft short texts of various forms and genres, including personal narratives, persuasive texts, and procedural texts, using a variety of media, tools, and strategies

Grade 3: draft short texts of various forms and genres, including narrative, persuasive, and informational texts, using a variety of media, tools, and strategies

 

 

definition