So print this off or simply write down your answers and bring them to tutorial - and also take note of any questions that seem too open or interpretive, and perhaps require short essay style answers.
1. Which of the following is an example of how adult assumptions about childhood can lead to self-fulfilling prophecies?
a) if adults believe children should not read fairy-tales, they will let them watch Disney films instead
b) if parents refuse to read books to their children, the children will likely find another adult to read to them
c) if adults allow children to choose their own books to read, they may choose books that they find entertaining and interesting
d) if adults believe children are innocent, they will keep them away from interesting books because of potentially dangerous content
2. According to Dyer, how does the mainstream media treat gay characters unfairly or inappropriately in films?
a) By making all gay men flamboyantly so.
b) By inserting a masculine/feminine binary into homosexual couples. (I.E: even if they're both women, one of them obviously wears the pants)
c) By primarily using gay characters in comedy and horror films.
d) All of the above.
3. According to Marx & Engels, the class which is the ruling material force of
society is at the same time its ruling:
a) social force
b) artistic force
c) intellectual force
d) dominant force
4. How can childhood researchers, according to James, listen to the authentic
voice of the child?
a) Literally - listen to them
b) Researchers can explore the nature of the voice with which children are
attributed
c) Researchers can study documents relating to childhood (diaries, children's
literature, etc) and draw conclusions about childhood from these.
d) None of the above
5. What is David Jefferess concern in his article?
a) Western children go to school rather than work, and are expected to play rather than fulfil responsibilities to the household.
b) Western notion of childhood may not have existed prior to the eighteenth century
c) The dominant concept of the child in this discourse is dependent upon notions of work, education and the romantic construction of “childhood”.
d) The child in the CRC and child rights discourse is dependent upon the dominant, yet historically recent, conception of the “child” and to suggest how dependence on this concept of the “child” perpetuates structures of domination rather than contributes to the positive social change the child rights movement advocates.
6. When looking at the analysis of Deborah Ellis’ books that we have read this term, who is seen as the strongest character in terms of dealing with social values in labour?
a) Parvana
b) Diego
c) Binti
d) Jay
7. What author states: “the category of the subject is only constitutive of all ideology insofar as all ideology has the function (which defines it) of ‘constituting’ concrete individuals as subjects.”
a) Antonio Gramsci
b) Louis Althussier
c) Karl Marx
d) Ellen Riordan
8. During the 18th century, western children was thought of as
a) little devils
b) equivalent to adults
c) totally innocent
d) as imperfect adults
9. What is the name of the organiztion that Eshan Khan was the leader of?
a) bonded labor liberation front
b) children's liberation group
c) free the children
d) stop child exploitation
10. One of the best way to deal with bias is to
a) accept it and move on
b) report it to the proper authority
c) blame it on dominant ideology
d) to treat everyone equally regardless of race, class, nationality or sexual orientation
11. When Jenkins describes Hillary Clinton's "village" mentality, there is a particular idea or state that the child embodies. What is this state?
a) The embodiment of nostalgic remorse, or of an innocence that has been violated.
b) The embodiment of a dream for the future which must be built in the present.
c) The embodiment of change, its threat and its potential.
d) The embodiment of a temporary state, an emblem for our anxieties about the passing of time.
12. What major element is heavily emphasized throughout the novel of Bifocal?
a) Class
b) Sexuality
c) Stereotypes
d) Individuality
13. What does discursive matrix mean?
a) a representation of one whole text in the same areas within it.
b) a meaning is getting made and represented in lots of different arenas.
c) discourse of ideas and representations.
d) none of the above.
a) Because its never authentic enough.
b) Because its adult literature created for children.
c) Because all children books are all similar.
d) Because their too young to write books.
4 comments:
who were the bad good character in heaven shop?
a)gogo
b)binti's dad
c)binti's aunt
d)binti
who wrote the letter saying 'i am writting to brak off our engagement'
a)junie b)noel C)uncle mzola d)kwasi
Neil, thank you for posting these questions. I was wondering whether you were going to tell us which ones would make good multiple choice questions and which ones would make good essay questions, or whether this was something for us to decide on our own? Thanks!
natalie - The answer is both. Try to make that decision when you're answering, and then we'll discuss it when we take them up in tutorial as well.
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