The Children‘s Media Conference
TV & Film
In 2014, Nickelodeon and Rovio made significant moves into the educational app market, while for many years brands such as BP, Barclays and M&S have engaged in corporate social responsibility activity in schools. Brands can use their familiarity and their assets to support learning about subjects where they have specialist knowledge, or use character and stories familiar to children and young people as the core of educational resources.
If the brand name helps engage children and young people in home and school learning, is that simply a good thing? Do brands risk dumbing down education or creating a commercial playground that’s incompatible with education? Are there risks for schools and parents to balance with the reward? And what responsibilities does this demand of the brands, the schools and parents to ensure children get the best deal?
CMC 2015 - The Business of Digital
CMC 2015 - EdTech Futures
CMC 2015 - Maker Studios Masterclass
CMC 2015 - Put Your Money Where Your Mouth Is
CMC 2015 - It Takes Two
CMC 2015 - Industrial Light & Magic Masterclass
CMC 2015 - Game Change
CMC 2015 - Creative Keynote - Jenny Sealey
CMC 2015 - Closing Keynote - Dylan Collins
CMC 2015 - Changing Platforms
CMC 2015 - Changing Channels: Commissioner Conversation with Turner
CMC 2015 - Changing Channels: Commissioner Conversation with Nickelodeon
CMC 2015 - Changing Channels: Commissioner Conversation with Disney
CMC 2015 - Changing Channels: Commissioner Conversation with BBC
CMC 2015 - Changemaker - Seb Gallop
CMC 2015 - Changemaker - Sean Spooner
CMC 2015 - Changemaker - Laura “Laurbubble”
CMC 2015 - Changemaker - Guilherme Coelho
CMC 2015 - Changemaker - Faheem Anwar
CMC 2015 - Changemaker - Dan Pearce
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Multiverse Fancast
Cinema: A to B
I Finally Watched...
Kill James Bond!
Pod Meets World