The Australian-published quarterly media studies journal Screen Education is aimed at media teachers, and at secondary school teachers interested in harnessing the power of visual media to stimulate learning. It is essential reading for those with an interest in media literacy, offering a unique and engaging perspective on screen education, and is an invaluable resource for upper secondary students and university students studying film. Each issue provides the reader with practical classroom ideas, lesson plans and activities.
Screen Education No. 91 covers a range of films and television series including Call Me by Your Name, Beauty and the Beast, Mulan, Pi, Cool Hand Luke, The Seven Samurai and All Quiet on the Western Front. It revisits Eric Rohmer's highly creative, little-seen representation of King Arthur legends in Perceval. The issue also takes an in-depth look at the films of Paul Thomas Anderson, explores the depictions of asylum seekers abandoned by the Australian government in the documentary The Staging Post, examines how a German children's app can aid learning, investigates fact and fiction on social-media newsfeeds and covers all the best new digital tools for teachers.