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Ever consider how this television show, Community become the most perfect related text for Belonging?
Trailer
Pilot speech, encapsulation of belonging theme
here is the Syllabus overview
article worth noting on Community's literal analysis:
The Meta, Innovative Genius of 'Community'
On Season 3's episode 4 "Remedial Chaos Theory"
(All techniques used in community and pop culture reference)
Trailer
Pilot speech, encapsulation of belonging theme
here is the Syllabus overview
Any bold points of the above specifically are reflected for board of studies requirements within the TV series!!!Common Content – Area of Study
An Area of Study is the exploration of a concept that affects our perceptions of ourselves and our world. Students explore, analyse, question and articulate the ways in which perceptions of this concept are shaped in and through a variety of texts.
In the Area of Study, students explore and examine relationships between language and text, and interrelationships among texts. They examine closely the individual qualities of texts while considering the texts’ relationships to the wider context of the Area of Study. They synthesise ideas to clarify meaning and develop new meanings. They take into account whether aspects such as context, purpose and register, text structures, stylistic features, grammatical features and vocabulary are appropriate to the particular text.
The Area of Study integrates the range and variety of practices students undertake in their study and use of English. It provides students with opportunities to explore, analyse and experiment with:
• meaning conveyed, shaped, interpreted and reflected in and through texts
• ways texts are responded to and composed
• ways perspective may affect meaning and interpretation
• connections between and among texts
• how texts are influenced by other texts and contexts.
Students’ responses to texts are supported by their own composition of, and experimentation with, imaginative and other texts. They explore ways of representing events, experiences, ideas, values and processes, and consider the ways in which changes of form and language affect meaning.
The Area of Study and the prescribed texts will be subject to periodic evaluation and review.
Prescribed texts are:
• A range of prescribed texts for the Area of Study from which at least one must be selected. This text list will be published in an English Stage 6 support document.
In addition, students will explore texts of their own choosing relevant to the Area of Study. Students draw their chosen texts from a variety of sources, in a range of genres and media.
article worth noting on Community's literal analysis:
The Meta, Innovative Genius of 'Community'
On Season 3's episode 4 "Remedial Chaos Theory"
(All techniques used in community and pop culture reference)
Each season features the study group taking a class together with some sort of underlying theme. In the first season, it was Spanish and was built around the study group members learning to communicate with each other; in the second season, it was Anthropology, which highlighted the group growing into a tight-knit "tribe"; and in the third season, it is Biology, which will feed into the group struggling with their capacity to evolve.
Community is often praised for its often ironic and distant observation of these conventions, and high concept episodes are regarded as some of the show's best material, that isn't to say the low concepts are poor - quite the opposite in fact. Although high concept episodes weren't really seen until the end of Season 1 with Contemporary American Poultry, the first season was a solid comedy, with a genuinely poignant cast. Season 2 manage to sustain the growth and interaction between the characters and mix in outlandish scenarios and off beat humour.
I mean come on, the title of this show is already screaming about belongingOn the literal level, Community is about Jeff Winger. A smarmy attorney disbarred for faking his undergraduate degree, he enrolls at fictional Greendale Community College to get one. There he finds a motley bunch of students played by a very talented group of actors, including Jacobs, Chevy Chase, Donald Glover, Yvette Nicole Brown, Danny Pudi, and future mother to my children, Alison Brie. The crew forms an unlikely study group, and an even unlikelier family dynamic ensues.
Figuratively, however, Community is about something else entirely. The show's real subject is mass media, especially the conceits, tropes, and conventions of TV and movies. Just as Jeff and Britta aren't a real TV courtship, Community isn't actually a sitcom—not any more than The Onion is an actual news-gathering organization. Community, instead, is a weekly satire of the sitcom genre, a spoof of pop culture in general, and an occasionally profound critique of how living in mass media society can mess up human relationships in the real world. It's also funny, too. Some of that "profound critique" comes disguised in the form of boob jokes.
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