I have discovered a wonderful teaching resource that I plan to use every day for the rest of the semester and likely for the rest of my teaching career: my collection of Simpsons DVDs. There's a slight problem, though. The technology at the college I teach at is less than top-of-the-line.
Today I decided to show an episode called "Itchy and Scratchy and Marge" (in which Marge fights to censor the cartoon Itchy and Scratchy but later fights to stop censorship of Michelangelo's David) to my classes in order for them to "read" the episode rhetorically--to analyze the authors, the audience, the genre, and the angle of vision presented in the episode.
I even brought my own DVD player because I wasn't sure if each of the three classrooms had one. As it turns out, all three rooms have a DVD player, but none has a remote. (And I forgot to bring my own.) Which means that you can't select the episode you want to watch from the menu--you can watch the first episode and that's it. "Itchy and Scratchy and Marge" is the third or fourth episode on Disc Two, which means I was pretty much screwed. Being the quick thinker I am, though, I looked at the other discs to see if I could use any of the first episodes, and found that "Homer vs. Lisa and the Eighth Commandment" is the first episode on Disc Three.
This episode, though not quite as ingenious as the one on censorship, worked quite well for my purposes--the students could talk about what angle of vision the creators of the show were taking on stealing cable.
So despite my initial panic it all worked out. Then I got to my second class, realized that the DVD player is bolted into place such that the plug doesn't reach the outlet, and was glad I'd brought my own. Next time I'll bring an extension cord and a remote.
Anybody who uses the Simpsons in their teaching lesson gets huge points in my book. That is awesome!
ReplyDeleteGlad you figured out ways around the incoveniences surrounding modern technology.
Good thing I gave those back to you after only two months of having them appropriated into my own "teaching resources".
ReplyDeleteI'm glad other instructors have this problem. It's become the big joke in my class that I am incapable of working with any form of technology. . . Does that make me the joke?
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ReplyDeleteI've had to borrow remotes from other teachers myself....