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      UCL Press journals including Film Education Journal have now moved website.

      You will now find the journal, all publications and submission information, at https://journals.uclpress.co.uk/fej

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      Study guides and Australian documentary: The role of bridging materials in building educative, cultural and economic value

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      Film Education Journal
      UCL Press

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          Abstract

          The use of documentary, and in turn the value of documentary, is well established in formal education contexts. In addition to an established pedagogical value, this article examines the cultural and economic value of documentary in education through both national legislative reviews (the Australian Law Reform Commission’s (ALRC’s) Copyright and the Digital Economy) and a specific learning resource in the form of study guides. Within this research, study guides function as a means to explore the plurality of ways in which documentary may be valued through several stakeholders invested in sustaining educational engagement with the form. Most notably among these stakeholders is copyright collection agency Screenrights, which bridges the valuing of documentary between screen and education sectors alongside national funding agency Screen Australia and the Australian Teachers of Media (ATOM), an independent, non-profit, professional association promoting the study of media in education. ATOM in particular is synonymous with the creation of study guides for documentary films. Investigating the educative, cultural and economic value of study guides offers a discrete albeit valuable study of the ways in which documentary functions within Australian education contexts.

          Most cited references23

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          The Ideological Implications of Using “Educational” Film to Teach Controversial Events

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            Moulding the democratic citizen of the future: On the discourses and practices of film education in Sweden

            The aim of this article is to convey the history, practices and central discourses of film education in Sweden. The first part takes the pioneering efforts, dating back to 1908, as a starting point for describing the development of nationwide school cinema, financed by public funding and coordinated by the Swedish Film Institute. As I will argue, film education in Sweden is primarily used as a tool for fostering democratic citizens. The second part of the article discusses the main discourses of this film education model – that is, what constitutes this democratic citizen – and how these are conveyed. An analysis of film study guides produced by the Swedish Film Institute between 1988 and 2018 demonstrates that the main aim of what could be referred to as the Swedish model is to foster the basic principles of human rights as defined by the United Nations, and that this is achieved in a very convincing manner.
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              From Banished to Brother Outsider, Miss Navajo to An Inconvenient Truth: Documentary films as perspective-laden narratives

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Film Education Journal
                FEJ
                UCL Press
                2515-7086
                November 26 2020
                November 26 2020
                : 3
                : 2
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Queensland University of Technology, Australia
                Article
                10.14324/FEJ.03.2.07
                4d6139c5-7e24-42a8-8237-da55bc4f9d66
                © 2020

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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