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Preview of Coraline Pre-Viewing Lesson

Coraline Pre-Viewing Lesson

Hook your students before the movie even begins.This pre-viewing lesson uses Coraline’s opening sequence to introduce students to basic film form vocabulary while activating thematic questions that spark curiosity and prior knowledge. Students ease into film analysis with guided notes, essential questions, and scaffolded or non-scaffolded options for support. What’s Included:Pre-Viewing/Thematic Activation Questions (printable PDF & Editable Google Docs)Guided Viewing Lesson for Coraline’s open
Preview of Coraline — Pre-Viewing & Film Form Vocabulary Lesson Pack

Coraline — Pre-Viewing & Film Form Vocabulary Lesson Pack

Ease students into film analysis with Coraline.This lesson introduces essential film form vocabulary ( distance, angle, cinematography, editing, mise-en-scène, and composition) while guiding students through the opening scenes of Coraline. Scaffolded notes and a master vocabulary deck help students practice applying cinematic terms before diving into deeper analysis. What’s Inside: Pre-Viewing Lesson (Opening Scenes)Guided notes in two versions: • With scaffolding (shot descriptions provided)
Preview of Into the Spider-Verse Film Analysis Bundle Viewing Questions, Notebook & Seminar

Into the Spider-Verse Film Analysis Bundle Viewing Questions, Notebook & Seminar

This Into the Spider-Verse Teacher Bundle combines three of my most popular resources into one package—perfect for building a full week (or two!) of engaging, rigorous film study.What’s Included: 1. Viewing Questions (5 pages)Scaffolded, act-by-act questions to guide comprehension and analysisMotif-tracking activity for recurring visual and thematic elementsPrint + digital formats for flexible classroom use2. Guided Viewing Notebook (student-facing workbook) 40+ scene study pages with guiding
Preview of Coraline Film Form Vocabulary Lessons + Quiz Bundle

Coraline Film Form Vocabulary Lessons + Quiz Bundle

Introduce and assess film language with Coraline.This bundle combines two best-selling resources to help middle and high school students build and apply foundational film form vocabulary (distance, angle, cinematography, editing, mise-en-scène, and composition). Students ease into analysis with scaffolded pre-viewing lessons and then demonstrate mastery through a flexible vocabulary quiz with companion slides and clips. What’s Inside:Pre-Viewing + Film Vocabulary Lesson PackPre-viewing lesson us
Preview of Frankenweenie “It’s Alive!” Scene Comparisons: Intertextual Film Analysis

Frankenweenie “It’s Alive!” Scene Comparisons: Intertextual Film Analysis

In this lesson pack, students compare Tim Burton’s Frankenweenie reanimation scenes with iconic “It’s Alive!” sequences from Frankenstein (1931) and Young Frankenstein (1974). Through charts, guiding questions, and scaffolded prompts, they’ll analyze how motivation, sound, tone, mood, and theme shift across films — and what these choices say about science, responsibility, and parody. What’s Included: Comparison Chart: Sparky vs. Fish scenes (Frankenweenie)General Viewing Questions for compar
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