Course Content
Week 1: Media Literacy Foundations + My Voice Story Seed
In Week 1, learners shift from passive media consumption to responsible creation. We introduce media literacy basics (bias, intent, credibility), the SAMS feedback framework (Story, Audience, Message, Style), and course safety guidelines (consent, privacy, respectful representation). Weekly outputs: My Media Map + 60–90s “My Voice” story seed + 1-page SAMS analysis of a media example.
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Week 2: Story Circles, Pitching + Storyboarding
Learners discover meaningful stories through story circles, then shape their ideas into a clear pitch and message. They plan their project using a simple script/narration outline and a storyboard that guides production.
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Week 3: Visual Storytelling + Photography + Photo Essay
Learners develop visual storytelling skills using mobile photography and ethical image-making. They produce a photo essay with captions and sequencing that clearly communicates a message and story arc.
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Week 4: Audio Storytelling Voice, Interview + Sound
Learners practice audio storytelling—recording clean voice, using ambient sound, and (optionally) conducting short interviews with consent. They create a structured audio story and strengthen ethical storytelling habits.
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Week 5: Mobile Video Production + Shooting for Story
Learners shoot better mobile video using shot types, stability, and simple sequencing. They film a short story sequence guided by a shot list and learn how B-roll supports meaning and emotion.
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Week 6: Editing + Rough Cut Critique
Learners edit their work into a rough cut using a practical mobile workflow. They participate in structured peer critique using SAMS and create a revision plan to improve clarity, pacing, sound, and message.
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Week 7: Media Literacy for Impact, Truth, Bias + Distribution
Learners deepen media literacy for impact—verification habits, misinformation awareness, and responsible representation. They create a simple distribution plan and a campaign asset (poster/teaser/posts) to support their story.
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Week 8: Final Cut + Online Exhibition Showcase
Learners complete their final cut, write an artist statement, and prepare an exhibition-ready entry with credits and permissions. The course ends with an online showcase and reflection on growth as a Digital Change Maker.
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Digital Change Makers: Mobile Storytelling & Media Literacy (8 Weeks)

SAMS Framework: How to Analyze and Give Feedback

 

🎯 Lesson Goal

 

By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:

  • Explain what SAMS stands for
  • Use SAMS to analyze any advert/clip/post
  • Give respectful, helpful feedback to peers using a simple structure

 


1) What is SAMS?

 

SAMS is a simple framework to help you understand media and give useful feedback.

 

It stands for:

 

S — Story

 

What happens? What is being shown or said?
What’s the beginning, middle, and end (even if it’s short)?

A — Audience

 

Who is this meant for?
What age group, community, or group of people is it trying to reach?

M — Message

 

What is the main idea?
What does it want you to believe, feel, or do?

S — Style

 

How is it made?
Look at visuals, tone, music, language, pacing, colors, camera shots, editing, and mood.

 

Simple idea:

 

SAMS helps you see not just what media says, but how it works.

 


2) Why SAMS matters in this course

 

You will use SAMS to:

 

  • Analyze media (ads, posts, videos, news) with a critical eye
  • Improve your own creative work (photo, audio, video)
  • Give peer feedback that is clear, respectful, and helpful
  • Build a strong feedback culture in our community

 

SAMS is especially useful because it avoids insults like “It’s bad.”
Instead, it helps you say exactly what works and what can improve.

 


 

3) SAMS in Action (Worked Example)

 

Let’s imagine a short advert/post:

 

A 30-second video shows a student struggling with homework, then using an online learning app, then smiling as they improve. Bright music plays. The final text says: “Download EduSmart — Learn Faster!”

 

S — Story

 

A learner struggles → finds a solution (the app) → succeeds and feels confident.

 

A — Audience

 

Students and parents, especially those who want better academic performance.

 

M — Message

 

“This app will help you improve quickly. Download it.”
It also suggests: “If you don’t use this, you may remain behind.”

 

S — Style

 

Bright colors, fast edits, positive music, clear before/after contrast, short text on screen, happy ending.

 

Conclusion: The advert uses a simple “problem → solution → success” story and emotional style to persuade people to download the app.

 


4) How to write SAMS feedback to a peer (Copy/Paste Format)

 

When you comment on someone’s work, use this structure:

 

SAMS Feedback

 

  1. Story: What I understood is…
  2. Audience: I think this is meant for… because…
  3. Message: The main message I received is…
  4. Style: The style feels… (tone/visuals/pacing/sound)
  5. Strength: One thing that worked well is…
  6. Suggestion: One improvement I suggest is…
  7. Question: One question I have is…

 

✅ Keep feedback kind, specific, and actionable.

 


5) Quick Practice (10 minutes)

Choose ONE piece of media right now (any of these):

 

  • A WhatsApp forward
  • A TikTok/Instagram video
  • A YouTube short
  • A poster/advert
  • A news headline/post

 

Our Give Feedback to this Video

 

 

 

 

Now write a short SAMS analysis:

 

S — Story

 

What is happening? (2–3 lines)

 

A — Audience

 

Who is it for? (1–2 lines)

 

M — Message

 

What does it want you to believe/feel/do? (1–2 lines)

 

S — Style

 

What creative choices do you notice? (2–3 lines)

 

Optional extra:

 

Do you notice any bias or missing information?

 


6) Common mistakes to avoid with SAMS

 

  • Mixing Audience and Message:
    Audience = who it targets, Message = what it wants them to take away.
  • Judging without evidence:
    Instead of “This is boring,” say “The pacing is slow and the hook comes late.”
  • Only criticizing:
    Always include at least one strength and one improvement suggestion.

 

✅ Key Takeaways

 

  • SAMS = Story, Audience, Message, Style
  • SAMS helps you analyze media and improve your own work
  • Good feedback is respectful + specific + actionable

 


What’s Next

 

Next lesson: Safe & Ethical Storytelling (Consent, Privacy, Respect)
You’ll learn how to create stories that protect people, avoid harm, and still remain powerful.

Exercise Files
AYV_SAMS_Worksheet_English_2.0.pdf
Size: 90.76 KB