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Saturday January 29, 2005 THE ARTICLEHollywood and the movie industry yesterday took its latest step in trying to battle movie piracy and illegal file sharing enlisting the help of Mums and Dads. Yes, parents are being encouraged to get involved in the fight against copyright infringement and the illegal downloading of movies via peer-to-peer (P2P) software. The MPAA (Motion Picture Association of America) has released software called Parent File Scan to allow parents to search the computers of their kids and then delete any illegal programs or files and thus avoid the risk of prosecution against copyright infringement. MPAA boss, Dan Glickman said, We cannot allow people to steal our motion pictures and other products online, and we will use all the options we have available to encourage people to obey the law," According to the MPAA web site, “Parent File Scan software helps consumers check whether their computers have peer-to-peer software and potentially infringing copies of motion pictures and other copyrighted material. Removing such material can help consumers avoid problems frequently caused by peer-to-peer software.” The MPAA assures parents no information would be passed on to it, “The information generated by the software is made available only to the program’s user, and is not shared with or reported to the MPAA or any other body.” Glickman said, “Many parents are concerned about what their children have downloaded and where they've downloaded it from.” Maybe many children have similar concerns about their parents. Lesson & plan in Word.doc Example Class Handout in .pdf POSSIBLE WARM UPS / COOL DOWNS1. CHAT: Talk in pairs or groups about movies / P2P / file sharing / piracy / parental responsibility / parental spying / Big Brother / George Orwell… 2. TECH JARGON: Explain the following technical terms. Do you have / use any of them? Are they good? ADSL / ISDN / AOL / blog / SD ROM / CD-RW / CPU / DVD / Ghz / HTML / http / ISP / LAN / MP3 / MPEG / PC / PDA / pdf / PS2 / PSP / URL / WAP / WWW / WYSIWYG 3. RU A PIRATE?: Talk about illegal downloading and copyright infringement. Who has photocopied a non-copiable book / taped music from the radio or friends’ CDs / videotaped movies from the TV / downloaded music or movies on the Internet / bought fake goods …? Find the biggest infringer. 4. OPINIONS: Discuss the following opinions with your partner / group. Find out which are the most commonly held opinions: PRE-READING IDEAS1. WORD SEARCH: Students look in their dictionaries / computer to find collocates, other meanings, information, synonyms … of the words ‘parent’, and ‘pirate’. 2. TRUE / FALSE: Students look at the headline and predict whether they believe the following statements are true or false: 3. SYNONYM MATCH: Students match the following synonyms from the article:
4. PHRASE MATCH: Students match the following phrases based on the article (sometimes more than one combination is possible):
WHILE READING ACTIVITIES1. GAP-FILL: Put the missing words under each paragraph into the gaps. Parents to help fight file sharing
2. TRUE/FALSE: Students check their answers to the T/F exercise. 3. SYNONYMS: Students check their answers to the synonyms exercise. 4. PHRASE MATCH: Students check their answers to the phrase match exercise. 5. QUESTIONS: Students make notes for questions they would like to ask the class about the article. 6. VOCABULARY: Students circle any words they do not understand. In groups pool unknown words and use dictionaries to find the meanings. POST READING IDEAS1. GAP-FILL: Check the answers to the gap-fill exercise. 2. QUESTIONS: Students ask the discussion questions they thought of above to their partner / group / class. Pool the questions for all students to share. 3. VOCABULARY: As a class, go over the vocabulary students circled above. 4. STUDENT-GENERATED SURVEY: Pairs/Groups write down 3 questions based on the article. Conduct their surveys alone. Report back to partners to compare answers. Report to other groups / the whole class. 5. ‘PARENT’/ ‘PIRATE’: Students make questions based on their findings from pre-reading activity #1. 6. DISCUSSION: Students ask each other the following questions: (a) Do you illegally download movies or music from the Internet? HOMEWORK1. VOCAB EXTENSION: Choose several of the words from the text. Use a dictionary or the Google search field to build up more associations / collocations of each word. 2. INTERNET: Search the Internet and find more information on filesharing. Share your findings (and files ?) with your class next lesson. 3. DOWNLOAD GUIDELINES: Create a list of guidelines outlining what can and cannot be downloaded. 4. LETTER TO DAN: Write a letter to MPAA boss Dan Glickman telling him what you think of his new Parent File Scan software. ANSWERSTRUE / FALSE (a) The movie industry is trying to fight piracy. T DEFINITIONS: (a) step (n) (b) piracy (n) (c) file sharing (n) (d) copyright (n) (e) infringement (n) (f) obey (v) (g) peer-to-peer (adj) (h) assures (v) (i) body (n) (j) concerns (n) SYNONYM MATCH:
PHRASE MATCH:
GAP FILL: Parents to help fight file sharingHollywood and the movie industry yesterday took its latest step in trying to battle movie piracy and illegal file sharing enlisting the help of Mums and Dads. Yes, parents are being encouraged to get involved in the fight against copyright infringement and the illegal downloading of movies via peer-to-peer (P2P) software. The MPAA (Motion Picture Association of America) has released software called Parent File Scan to allow parents to search the computers of their kids and then delete any illegal programs or files and thus avoid the risk of prosecution against copyright infringement. MPAA boss, Dan Glickman said, We cannot allow people to steal our motion pictures and other products online, and we will use all the options we have available to encourage people to obey the law," According to the MPAA web site, “Parent File Scan software helps consumers check whether their computers have peer-to-peer software and potentially infringing copies of motion pictures and other copyrighted material. Removing such material can help consumers avoid problems frequently caused by peer-to-peer software.” The MPAA assures parents no information would be passed on to it, “The information generated by the software is made available only to the program’s user, and is not shared with or reported to the MPAA or any other body.” Glickman said, “Many parents are concerned about what their children have downloaded and where they've downloaded it from.” Maybe many children have similar concerns about their parents. Help Support This Web Site
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