School kids being offered the opportunity to go and see pictures for free to commemorate the National Schools Film Week.
As part of the National Schools Film Week, school going children are being given the opportunity to go to the movies free of charge and this is more in the way of a treat in the course of the long term of school in autumn. The teachers can book the tickets free via the Internet to be present at Uckfield Picturehouse and watch Ice Age: Continental Drift (U, 94) on Tuesday the 23rd of October. If not, they also have the choice of seeing Puu-in-Boots (U, 90) on Wednesday the 26th of the same month.
The main objective of this venture is to be of help to taking classes in the classroom by offering schools to give their students a chance to experience something that connects them straight to parts of the curriculum and this would be backed by a library via the Internet with a lot of matter that is linked to the various films separately as well as general topics that would more or less be an extended classroom.
Over 470,000 students with teachers were present at the film festival the previous year. The current yearn the festival that is being conducted on a level incomparable with that of any other nation, with 2,500 projections spread across 570 cinema halls throughout the UK, will be celebrating its 17th anniversary.
The Festival Director Mr. Nick Walker stated that the carnival is trying to develop a better and greater awareness of movies on the basis of the idea of connections and conversations in a range of films, refer to problem linked to cultural exchange and also develop an understanding amid the teachers to utilise movies through the school syllabus. A teacher from Little Horsted Primary School, Mr. Mark Hughes remarked that this festival gave the kids in school an opportunity to go out and stick together as a class discuss points in the movie and become more sociable.
To avail of further information or to book seats one can log on to www.nationalschoolsfilmweek.org.