Final Project Exemplars
These sample projects show what a strong final project can look like. They are models, not scripts. Each one illustrates how a student might combine the skills from this course into an original media creation. Use them for inspiration and planning, not for copying.
Each exemplar includes the project format, audience, core message, how evidence and sources are used, what makes it strong, what could go wrong, and how it connects to the Final Project Rubric.
Exemplar 1: "Ads Are Everywhere" — Informational Poster Series
The Concept
A student creates a series of three posters about hidden advertising in everyday life. Each poster focuses on a different type of disguised ad: sponsored content in video feeds, product placement in shows and games, and influencer recommendations that are actually paid partnerships. The posters are designed for a school hallway or library bulletin board.
Project Details
| Element | Description |
|---|---|
| Format | Three printed or hand-drawn posters (11×17 or similar) |
| Audience | Other kids at school, ages 8–12 |
| Core message | Ads don't always look like ads — here are three disguised types and how to spot them |
| Evidence/sources | Each poster includes a real-world example (described generically, not brand-specific), a "how to spot it" checklist, and a note about where the student learned this information |
What Makes It Strong
- Clear purpose and defined audience. The student knows exactly who they're talking to and what they want them to take away.
- Applies multiple course concepts. Uses construction choices (color, layout, word choice) intentionally to make the posters engaging. Applies "Follow the Incentive" thinking to explain why disguised ads exist. Demonstrates understanding of persuasion techniques.
- Evidence is specific. Each poster cites a concrete type of hidden advertising with enough detail that a reader could recognize one in the wild.
- Ethical and honest. The posters inform without being preachy. The tone is "here's something interesting to notice," not "you're being tricked and should be afraid."
What Could Go Wrong
- Too vague. If the posters just say "ads are everywhere" without specific examples or a "how to spot it" guide, they don't teach anything actionable.
- Preachy or scary tone. If the message becomes "companies are evil" instead of "here's how to notice what's happening," the project misses the curriculum's empowerment goal.
- No construction awareness. If the student doesn't think about their own design choices (layout, colors, readability), they're not demonstrating media creation skills.
Rubric Alignment
| Rubric Category | How This Project Meets It |
|---|---|
| Clear Purpose & Audience | Defined audience (school kids), clear informational goal |
| Intentional Construction Choices | Poster layout, colors, and headlines designed to attract and inform |
| Accuracy & Honesty | Real-world examples, no exaggeration or fearmongering |
| Ethical Media Practice | Informative, fair, and empowering in tone |
| Application of Course Concepts | Business models, persuasion, construction choices |
| Presentation & Communication | Posters displayed and explained to an audience |
Exemplar 2: "Before You Share" — Short Video or Slide Presentation
The Concept
A student creates a 90-second video (or 6-slide presentation) that walks viewers through a simple verification routine they can use before sharing something they see online. The video uses a specific example — a fictional-but-realistic viral claim about an animal fact — and shows the viewer how to check it step by step.
Project Details
| Element | Description |
|---|---|
| Format | 60–90 second video (recorded on a phone or tablet) or 6 slides with script |
| Audience | Kids their own age who use social media or share things in group chats |
| Core message | Before you share something surprising, take 30 seconds to check it — here's how |
| Evidence/sources | The video walks through a live fact-check of a specific claim, showing the steps (search the claim, check multiple sources, look at the original source) and the result |
What Makes It Strong
- Teaches a specific, actionable skill. The viewer walks away knowing exactly what to do — not just that they should "be careful."
- Uses a concrete example. Instead of abstract advice, the student demonstrates the verification process with a real walkthrough.
- Appropriate for the audience. The language, pacing, and tone match what kids that age would actually watch and find useful.
- Connects analysis to action. The "next move" isn't just "be skeptical" — it's "here are three things you can do in 30 seconds."
What Could Go Wrong
- All advice, no demonstration. If the video just tells viewers to check things without showing the process, it becomes a lecture instead of a tool.
- Too complicated. If the verification routine has too many steps or uses jargon, the audience won't remember or use it.
- Misleading framing. If the example claim is real or the fake claim could be mistaken for a real fact, the video could accidentally spread the misinformation it's trying to address. Using a clearly fictional example avoids this.
Rubric Alignment
| Rubric Category | How This Project Meets It |
|---|---|
| Clear Purpose & Audience | Specific audience (peers who share content), clear teaching goal |
| Intentional Construction Choices | Video pacing, on-screen text, tone of voice selected for audience |
| Accuracy & Honesty | Fact-check process is authentic and correctly modeled |
| Ethical Media Practice | Responsible — doesn't spread the example claim as real |
| Application of Course Concepts | Verification skills, source-checking, sharing consequences |
| Presentation & Communication | Clear walkthrough with voiceover or live narration |
Exemplar 3: "How My Feed Works" — Illustrated Explainer
The Concept
A student creates an illustrated, hand-drawn or digitally designed explainer (like a mini comic or infographic) showing how recommendation algorithms work. The explainer follows a fictional character through a week of using a video app, showing how the algorithm learns from their clicks and gradually narrows their feed. It ends with a "what you can do" section.
Project Details
| Element | Description |
|---|---|
| Format | Illustrated comic strip or infographic (4–6 panels or sections), hand-drawn or digital |
| Audience | Younger kids (ages 7–9) or classmates |
| Core message | Your feed is built by a system that watches what you click — here's how it works and what you can do about it |
| Evidence/sources | The explainer uses the algorithm concepts from the course (engagement signals, personalization, filter bubble), credited to the curriculum lessons |
What Makes It Strong
- Age-appropriate translation. The student takes a complex concept (recommendation algorithms) and explains it in a way a younger child could understand — using a character, a story, and clear visuals.
- Shows the mechanism. Instead of just saying "algorithms decide what you see," the explainer shows the step-by-step process: click → signal → more of the same → narrower feed.
- Includes agency. The "what you can do" section turns the explainer from a warning into a tool. Options might include: "Try searching for something new," "Notice when everything in your feed feels the same," "Ask someone what they see on their feed."
- Creative and personal. The visual format showcases the student's design thinking and construction choices.
What Could Go Wrong
- Oversimplification that creates fear. If the explainer frames algorithms as "spying on you" or "controlling your mind," it misses the nuance. Algorithms are sorting tools — powerful, but not magical or malicious.
- No action step. If it only explains how algorithms work without suggesting what the viewer can do, it's informative but not empowering.
- Unclear visuals. If the panels are hard to follow or the sequence doesn't make sense, the explainer fails as media — which is itself a media literacy lesson worth discussing.
Rubric Alignment
| Rubric Category | How This Project Meets It |
|---|---|
| Clear Purpose & Audience | Younger audience, clear explanatory goal |
| Intentional Construction Choices | Panel layout, character design, visual flow |
| Accuracy & Honesty | Algorithm explanation is accurate and non-alarmist |
| Ethical Media Practice | Empowering tone, includes actionable advice |
| Application of Course Concepts | Algorithms, personalization, filter bubbles, engagement signals |
| Presentation & Communication | Visual storytelling with logical sequence |
Exemplar 4: "The Headline Remix" — Audio or Written Piece
The Concept
A student creates a short podcast episode (2–3 minutes) or a written blog post (300–400 words) comparing how three different sources covered the same event. The student explains what each source included and left out, what tone each used, and what the differences reveal about construction choices in news media. The piece ends with the student's own assessment of which coverage was most complete and why.
Project Details
| Element | Description |
|---|---|
| Format | Podcast episode (~2–3 minutes) or written blog post (~300–400 words) |
| Audience | Family members, classmates, or a general audience of curious kids |
| Core message | The same event can be covered in very different ways — comparing sources gives you a more complete picture |
| Evidence/sources | Three actual articles or reports about the same real event (age-appropriate, non-political), with specific details about what each one included, emphasized, and omitted |
What Makes It Strong
- Applies core analysis skills to real media. The student uses construction-choice analysis, source comparison, and the Media Checkpoint on real-world content — not a classroom exercise.
- Shows evidence-based reasoning. The final assessment ("I think Source B gave the most complete picture because...") is backed by specific details, not just a feeling.
- Demonstrates comparison as a skill. The student doesn't just describe each source — they compare them, showing what each choice reveals.
- Uses an appropriate, inclusive topic. The event chosen is age-appropriate, ethically safe, and does not require the student to take sides on a charged issue.
What Could Go Wrong
- Topic is too politically charged. If the student picks a divisive current-events topic, the project becomes about the controversy, not about the media analysis. Steer toward topics like a local event, a science discovery, a sports story, or a community issue.
- Summary without analysis. If the student just describes what each article said without comparing construction choices, the project stays at the surface level.
- False equivalence. The goal is not to say "all sources are equally good" or "all sources are biased." It's to show that comparison reveals choices, context, and completeness. If one source is genuinely more thorough, the student should say so and explain why.
Rubric Alignment
| Rubric Category | How This Project Meets It |
|---|---|
| Clear Purpose & Audience | Defined audience, clear analytical goal |
| Intentional Construction Choices | Podcast tone/pacing or blog structure chosen for audience |
| Accuracy & Honesty | Accurate representation of each source; fair comparison |
| Ethical Media Practice | Honest assessment without political bias or false equivalence |
| Application of Course Concepts | Construction choices, source comparison, framing, evidence |
| Presentation & Communication | Clear narration or writing with organized structure |
How to Use These Exemplars
For students:
- Read at least two exemplars before you start planning your final project.
- Notice what makes each one strong — that's what you're aiming for.
- Read what could go wrong — that's what you're avoiding.
- Use these as inspiration, not templates. Your project should reflect your own ideas, interests, and voice.
For caregivers and educators:
- Share these exemplars during Week 15 when students are planning.
- Use the "What Could Go Wrong" sections to gently guide students away from common pitfalls.
- Reference the Rubric Alignment tables to show students how the rubric categories apply to real projects.
- Encourage students to choose formats they're excited about — engagement drives quality.
Looking for the rubric? See the Final Project Rubric for the full evaluation criteria.