Bullfrog Films is partnering with NAMLE for an extraordinary Media Literacy Week program addressing the impact of digital socialization on a society raised on smartphones.
Media Literacy Week encourages us to critical analyze the shaping effects our media has on us. Join students from other schools as they begin the No App For Life challenge! This activity begins November 6th - Media Literacy Week - as students (teachers and parents too!) will use this guide and journal to step back, analyze our media use, take a break from the digital demands of the world and experience the benefits of authentic connections in a reflective and mindful communication experience.
With purchase of the film CELLING YOUR SOUL we will include:
- Film Guide and No App for Life Challenge
- Joni Siani's book, Celling Your Soul: No App For Life
- Crate-your-phone box
PLUS, for the first 10 purchasers:
- one-hour of Joni Siani's time-as a consultation, Skype Q&A, or training for your teachers.
Use coupon code NAMLE17 for a 15% discount. Order through November 13, 2017 to take advantage of this offer.
Note: There are two versions of the film on the DVD: 48-mins and 26-mins.
In one short decade, we have totally changed the way we interact with one another. The millennial generation, the first to be socialized in a digital world, is now feeling the unintended consequences.
CELLING YOUR SOUL is a powerful and informative examination of how our young people actually feel about connecting in the digital world and their love/hate relationship with technology. It provides empowering strategies for more fulfilling, balanced, and authentic human interaction within the digital landscape.
The film reveals the effects of "digital socialization" by taking viewers on a personal journey with a group of high school and college students who through a digital cleanse discover the power of authentic human connectivity, and that there is "No App" or piece of technology that can ever replace the benefits of human connection.
Grade Level: 6 - 12, College, Adults
US Release Date: 2017
Copyright Date: 2017
DVD ISBN: 1-941545-85-8
Reviews "I often profess the roots of many of the sustainability issues faced by humanity lie in a separation from the rest of nature...If a failure to identify with the rest of the natural world contributes to a disconnect between our choices and negative environmental and social consequences, what will be the results of isolating ourselves from each other? Use this timely documentary to spur discussions (face to face!) about the important, but often overlooked, impacts our electronics have on social development." Joy Joann Scrogum, Emerging Technologies Resource Specialist, Co-coordinator of the Sustainable Electronics Initiative, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
"Celling Your Soul succeeds in capturing the ways in which cell phones are pervading our lives. It is very engaging and sparks great conversation among young people." Dr. Roberta Golinkoff, Professor of Education, University of Delaware, Author, Becoming Brilliant: What Science Tells us About Raising Successful Children
"Very useful and engaging. Like fish in water, we have come to rely on anytime/anywhere access to information, content, and each other. This is especially true of young people growing up in today's digital environment. This film takes the fish out of water for a fresh perspective on its bowl - and the broader world around it." Dr. Scott W. Campbell, Professor of Telecommunications, University of Michigan
"An honest and overdue evaluation of how our devices are shaping us...A heartwarming and eye opening understanding that people are more important than devices." NYC Independent Film Festival
"Celling Your Soul has the potential to intimately connect with students viewers. The students featured provide a level of peer to peer support for the viewers and open a dialogue about the harms of being so closely connected to a cell phone. Through personal stories and revelations the viewer is left with the very provocative question: 'What benefits could a technology cleanse introduce to my life?'" Tara Stamm, Dept of Sociology, Virginia Commonwealth University
"The point of the digital cleanse is that it affords participants the opportunity to take an introspective look at how they are socially, emotionally, and biologically affected by technology and refl
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