Thursday 28 February 2019

Hang Line: Extreme Mountain Climbing

Hang Line is a fun mobile game created by Ed Kay.

Swing Up A Mountain

Hang Line is a game for that like a meditative experience, the challenge of a puzzle, and the vague notion that their character is doing something positive for the fictional universe. The premise of the game is that you guide your character from iceberg to iceberg via grappling hook, rescuing individuals whok are stranded on a mountain. Once you’ve cleared all the individuals that you need to find in a particular level, you still need to make your way to the top. Falling is acceptable, as long as there’s something beneath you to catch you. As you advance, naturally, the challenges and obstacles grow increasingly harder.

Save The Stranded People

Even if you’re scared of heights, Hang Line can provide a soothing experience. The graphics are well done, and it’s satisfying to watch your character swing from one iceberg to another. It’s nice that the game takes climbing seriously, making the cartoonish game as “realistic” as possible without losing its fun edge. Each of the 50 worlds was hand built by the designer, and there are tons of useful gadgets and power-ups that you can earn along the way. Do you have a hidden desire to scale a mountain? Do you want to rescue people who are stranded? Start with Hang Line instead.


Hang Line: Extreme Mountain Climbing posted first on http://film-streamingsweb.blogspot.com

Wednesday 27 February 2019

Astound: Your Personal Voice Coach

Astound is like a personal voice coach in your pocket.

Learn to Speak Better

Even if you don’t think you need a personal voice coach in your pocket, you might. I tested out Astound because it looks like it might be interesting for singers or professional speakers, but it ended up having some applicable uses for my own life. The app literally is what it advertises, offering short video lessons beginning with the basics of training your mind and body to become a better speaker or singer. They teach you exercises to relax different muscles on your face, as well as techniques that help with projection and tempo. It gets you thinking about the way you talk, which is better than what many apps do.

For Any Occasion

Astound collects data about your voice, which is displayed in a visual manner so that you can work on the different aspects of it that you want or need to target. While using the app, for instance, I learned that I was speaking at around the same tempo as JFK (Steve Jobs spoke pretty quickly, apparently). Although Astound has a premium membership paywall if you want to use many of its features, the basic introduction is still worth checking out. The more advanced features—such as being able to specifically prep for a speech or focus on your speaking anxiety, etc.—could be worth investigating if any of them appeal to you, as well. No matter what, Astound is a unique app with a premise that can be fun for anyone and useful for everyone.


Astound: Your Personal Voice Coach posted first on http://film-streamingsweb.blogspot.com

Monday 25 February 2019

The Beauty of Transgender Lived Experiences

“I love mermaids. They are part of two worlds they are part of the ocean world and the human world. And, sometimes, they have to decide which world they want to live in. I can kind of relate to that.”

This statement, spoken by Tru, introduces us to one of the young people sharing her story in Christina Willings’ documentary Beauty.  Tru relates how she sometimes feels pulled in different directions with regard to her identity. Most of us hold assumptions and ideas about what gender is and the role it should play in people’s lives. We may understand our gender, but to truly know someone else’s gender journey as it relates to their identity and/or expression, we must hear from them.

oehttps://www.nfb.ca/film/beauty/

Beauty follows five gender-diverse young people whose stories give viewers the unique opportunity to listen to and learn how young people experience the world when their gender does not conform to society’s expectations. These stories are timely in the education sector, because many schools are trying to actively promote inclusive and safer spaces for students and staff. We need to hear the voices of lived experiences so that we can recognize where our challenges and strengths lie.

There are various ways that Beauty can be employed in discussions about gender diversity in the classroom. Below is a list of topics to explore with students.

Transgender and Gender-Creative People Have Positive Stories to Tell

As transgender and gender-diverse people have fought for rights, recognition, and respect, many of the prominent narratives about them in contemporary culture emphasize their anger or humiliation at the marginalization or oppression they’ve faced. Yet, transgender and gender-diverse people have beautiful life experiences to share and many are positive. Several of the brave young people in Beauty spoke about how their families supported them, about their dating partners and about their modes of self-expression. They are living full lives with relationships, interests, talents, friends and supportive adults.

Questions for the classroom:

  • What is a positive story you’ve heard about transgender or gender-diverse people?
  • How can you affirm someone else’s gender identity or gender expression? (Affirmation can be in the form of words, statements, actions, etc.)

Transphobia

Transphobia is real. In Beauty, Bex states, “I don’t like to talk about it in public because it could be dangerous for me.” In Egale Canada’s Every Class in Every School: Final Report on the First National Climate Survey on Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia in Canadian Schools (2011), trans-identified students report high levels of verbal, physical and sexual harassment on a daily basis at school. The youth in the film shared how they were verbally harassed when they ran in single-gendered sports teams and how they experienced sexual harassment in the washroom at school.

Questions for the classroom:

  • What challenges do you believe transgender or gender-diverse students would experience in your school?
  • In what ways can students and staff intervene to make their schools safer?

Policies and Spaces

Beauty presents an opportunity for students to reflect on how they, and their school, could proactively educate their peers and develop wiser school polices relating to gender. For example, schools continue to have a lot of work to do in single-gendered spaces such as washrooms and physical-education change rooms. This issue is highlighted in the film when Fox tells us that, “I had to be escorted to the washroom because they could not believe I was either gender. It was disgusting to me.” In addition to Fox’s comment, Bex states, “I don’t like going to the girls’ washroom. I hate it…. Because I am a boy.” Students might consider the necessity of providing safe access to washrooms for all people. This is a complex issue that speaks about people’s feelings of comfort and safety. Often the discussion is more in depth than about just having an all-gender washroom in a school, as that is not always enough to ensure the experience is private, accessible, safe and comfortable.

Questions for the classroom:

  • What policies exist to protect gender identity and gender-expression rights for people in Canada and in your respective province?
  • How do policies help people feel safe in your school? What else needs to be done?

Families

Having supportive and affirming family members significantly contributes to better mental-health and well-being outcomes for transgender and gender-creative youth, as indicated in Being Safe, Being Me in Ontario: Results of the Canadian Trans Youth Health Survey (2014). Each youth in Beauty introduces us to their families, and students can consider how families impact their own development.

Questions for the classroom:

  • How does having a supportive family help individuals who may be different from others? What makes you think this is important?
  • Can you share any stories of supportive families?

Medical-Transition Options

The gender-creative youth in this film also share thoughts on medical-transition options, such as puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones, and how these tools allow them to be their true and authentic selves and affirm their gender identities and expressions.

Questions for the classroom:

  • Why do you think people are often curious about medical-transition stories from transgender and gender-diverse people?
  • Many transgender and gender-diverse people do not want to talk about their medical transition with others. How can people respect other people’s boundaries and privacy? What questions do you believe are inappropriate to ask?

Coping

Most of the youth in Beauty speak about how they find ways to cope with being different or experiencing transphobia. They talk about self-expression through art, fighting for trans rights in the Catholic School Board or making movies with their dolls to capture what “real” endings should look like. Coping is a life lesson we all must learn, and for some, increased adversity makes learning to find coping strategies even more important.

Questions for the classroom:

  • Why is learning to cope with difficulties or adversity so important?
  • What positive coping methods have you seen others use?
  • What good coping methods have you used in the past?

As changes are made to our curriculum and educators work hard to create safer spaces for students of all gender identities and expressions in the classroom, we need more tools to have sensitive conversations. Beauty has created a space for lived experience to be shared, and we can teach our students to listen, empathize and appreciate the beauty that lies within these narratives. This film can be used in the classroom to introduce gender identity through the powerful stories of youth, as opposed to hearing from professionals or researchers who speak about them.

We can make our society a safer and more inclusive place for transgender, gender-fluid and gender-creative people if we learn to listen to them and take action based on what they tell us.

Gaela Mintz has worked as a Social Worker in the Gender-Based Violence Prevention Office at the Toronto District School Board for the last eight years. She recently opened a full-time private practice providing individual and family psychotherapy services to children, youth, adults and families. For more information you can check out her website.

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The post The Beauty of Transgender Lived Experiences appeared first on NFB Blog.


The Beauty of Transgender Lived Experiences posted first on http://film-streamingsweb.blogspot.com

Friday 22 February 2019

This Week on NFB.ca : Oscar Winners

It’s Oscar® time, and this year we’re extra excited because we’ve got a horse in the race. Well, maybe not a horse, but we do have a pig, a dog, an ape… well, you’ll see.

Throughout the NFB’s history it has produced many films that have gone on to be nominated for awards, and a good percentage of those films have won. When it comes to the Oscars, there have been 75 nominations and this year’s film, Animal Behaviour, marks the second nomination for Alison Snowden and David Fine. Fingers crossed it marks the second win, too.

Animal Behaviour

So how could we have a post about Oscar-nominated films and not lead with this year’s contender?

Brace yourself for a weird and wonderful foray into a group therapy session consisting of an ape, a leech, a blue bird, a pig, a praying mantis, and a cat, all led by Dr. Clement the dog. The film is a joy to watch. It’s perfect for today’s world and you will howl with laughter. “Oh… the things I’ve seen…”

It’s only free until Sunday, so if you haven’t seen it, watch it now!

oehttps://https://ift.tt/2wT4b79

Danish Poet

This Oscar winner was one of my first NFB loves. I am a huge fan of anything Torill Kove, and this animated short was my gateway film. It’s the story of Kasper, a young poet bent on meeting the famous writer Sigrid Undset but ending up on a completely different journey.

Danish Poet is the kind of film that tackles the big questions in life. But it does it with charm, humour, and grace. Through Kasper’s quest we see how all the little things add up in the end. If you haven’t seen it, watch it now. Then watch everything else Torill Kove has done.

oehttps://https://ift.tt/2BN48Nv

Ryan

Chris Landreth’s Oscar-winning masterpiece is the first film I watched when I started working at the NFB. Not to be confused with the first NFB film I ever saw – I couldn’t even tell you what that was. My supervisor at the time asked if I’d seen it. When I said no, he sat me down at my desk and hit play. When it was over, I thought, This is not the NFB I remember.

Get ready for a seriously psychedelic trip through the minds of both Landreth and celebrated Canadian animator Ryan Larkin. Literally. Landreth’s animation uses CGI to look beyond the surface, exposing the ugly underbelly of the human condition. Trying to understand Larkin’s downward spiral into addiction and panhandling, he digs deep, speaking with both Larkin and those closest to him.

oehttps://www.nfb.ca/film/ryan/

Flamenco at 5:15

Gotta dance? Then you’ll love this short documentary featuring the late Susana and Antonio Robledo. These were two of the greatest flamenco teachers from Spain, and they taught a class to the senior students at the National Ballet School of Canada.

This film took home the Oscar in 1984. No doubt a great deal of the film’s success had to do with Susana’s energy and charm, and the simple, impressionistic way in which it was shot. Truly a beautiful little film.

oehttps://https://ift.tt/2zW0IaW

The Sand Castle

Fans of the NFB will be no stranger to Co Hoedeman’s work. From his Ludovic series to Marianne’s Theatre, his films are designed to follow you from childhood into adulthood. This short won the Oscar in 1978, where it was nominated alongside another NFB film, Ishu Patel’s The Bead Game.

In this film, we meet a creature made of sand who sculpts other creatures out of sand. While the big guy is busy creating, all the little guys are furiously building a castle. But things take a sudden turn, and this clever little film proves it packs a few surprises.

oehttps://https://ift.tt/2MDtctH

 

The post This Week on NFB.ca : Oscar Winners appeared first on NFB Blog.


This Week on NFB.ca : Oscar Winners posted first on http://film-streamingsweb.blogspot.com

Thursday 21 February 2019

Mini-Lesson for I Like Girls

I Like Girls: Discovering Homosexual Desire

 Theme: Inclusion

Age: 13+

oehttps://https://ift.tt/2BuYnoB

Key words/topic: Identity building, sexual identity, inclusion, homosexuality, lesbian, gay, first attraction, first-hand account, tolerance, empathy, LGBTQ, episodic memory

Activity 1: Tweet or judgement call

This teen’s mother seems very at ease with her daughter’s sexual identity. How is this openness proof of empathy? In 140 characters and using at least one hashtag, summarize the important role of the family in adolescent identity building.

Or

The prospect of coming out to one’s parents can torment teens for years. Even though some parents might suspect that their child is gay, the subject is often just simply avoided. What would you recommend to a friend who’s ready to tell his or her parents? Please justify your answer.

As a teacher, you can use the examples below to create a discussion:

  • Talk about something in the news or something that you recently read as a way to bring up the subject.
  • Talk to your brother or sister before announcing it to your parents.
  • Talk about it to just one parent first.
  • Ask someone in the LGBTQ community for advice.

Go Deeper

It’s hard to predict how parents will react to the coming out. Teens may decide to tell their parents or not based on how the parents interact with other members of the LGBTQ community and on how they talk about gay people. Choosing your words wisely and role playing may prevent the message from being perceived as bad news and reassure the parents that their child is the same person as before.

Activity 2: Open-ended question

Using animals to illustrate intimate first-person accounts creates a sense of distance. How did this distancing technique make it easier for you to deal with this intimidating subject? Discuss the filmmaker’s creative choice, noting how it affected your perception of what it’s like to be gay.

Go Deeper

When we take a step back from our beliefs, opinions, convictions and prejudices, we’re often able to develop our critical-thinking skills and bring a different perspective to ideas that have been influenced by our environment or culture. What knowledge, opinions, convictions and prejudices have influenced your perception of sexual orientation?

Activity 3: In-class activity

Create a photomontage of the defining moments in your personal life. How are these moments similar and how are they different? What criteria did you use to choose these moments, and why are these moments memorable for you?

Go Deeper

In psychology, episodic memory is sometimes also called autobiographical memory because it helps to build an individual’s history and personal identity. Beyond remembering a place, a date or an event, this type of memory is mainly characterized by the memory of one’s emotional state at a specific point in time. This means that the most memorable moments in our lives are very often moments of emotional shock or upset that can be both positive and negative. Thanks to our episodic memory, we never forget our first day at school, the loss of a loved one, or our first intimate relationship.

 

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The post Mini-Lesson for I Like Girls appeared first on NFB Blog.


Mini-Lesson for I Like Girls posted first on http://film-streamingsweb.blogspot.com

Wednesday 20 February 2019

SMMRY: Summarize Text

SMMRY quickly and efficiently reduces large blocks of text to summarized points.

Summarize Anything

SMMRY is not an aesthetically pleasing site. In fact, it could be accurately referred to as ugly. Yet it accomplishes a function in such a simple and effective manner, that it’s actually more enjoyable to use than others that have attempted the same feat with fancier design. SMMRY does exactly what it tells you it’s going to do: summarize text in as many sentences as you’d like. You can paste in an article, an excerpt from a book, a homework assignment, or whatever it is that you want to read without actually reading. The site then quickly returns a summarized version of the text within the same box.

Quick, Easy, And Efficient

To demonstrate SMMRY‘s effectiveness, I pasted in the above paragraph and entered in that I would like to have the text summarized in two sentences. This is what the site returned: “SMMRY does exactly what it tells you it’s going to do: summarize text in as many sentences as you’d like. The site then quickly returns a summarized version of the text within the same box.” SMMRY is especially useful for summarizing news articles, as it cuts out the opinions and clutter and focuses on the points that matter. You can also upload a file or paste a link in order to get a summary that way. If you want something summarized, for whatever reason, check out SMMRY.


SMMRY: Summarize Text posted first on http://film-streamingsweb.blogspot.com

Tuesday 19 February 2019

Glide: Create An App From Google Sheets

Glide is a quick and easy app creation tool that utilizes Google Sheets.

Make An App

The barrier of entry to app creation remains high. Despite the best efforts of a handful of companies who’ve attempted to subvert Apple’s strict app development rules, there still is no dominant or reliable “Squarespace for apps.” Despite the justly due praise levied towards AppyPie on this blog, even that service ultimately revealed itself to contain several flaws. Glide, another company promising the ability for technologically-illiterate people to create apps “in 5 minutes, for free,” is attempting to establish a new method of app creation that might make sense a specific audience: Google Sheets. Without quoting any exact data, it seems as if businesses, freelancers, students, and others have been flocking towards Google Sheets over the past few years, and using them for a variety of uses: from planning budgets to making simple lists. It only makes sense that at least some Google Sheets-savvy users would be interested in creating an app from their data.

Only Use Google Sheets

In testing out Glide, I found the platform to be incredibly simple and straightforward. I easily created an app that listed some of our more recent weekly faves, as well as a quick title for each of the links. Within seconds, this data was populated onto a virtual app. The site also lets you scan a QR code to test the app version on your mobile device. In comparison to the aforementioned AppyPie, Glide‘s design and ease-of-use is much stronger, and their promotional emails and in-site tutorials make it easier to understand how the whole process works. There are obvious limitations to the site, such as privacy concerns in connecting your Google account, and the relative lack of options to enhance the design of the app. Yet for anyone who’s looking for a quick way to make a fun, shareable app, Glide is worth a chance.


Glide: Create An App From Google Sheets posted first on http://film-streamingsweb.blogspot.com

How We Selected 80 NFB Productions to Commemorate Our 80th Anniversary

As part of our commemoration of the National Film Board’s 80th anniversary, we decided to choose a symbolic 80 powerful productions to high...