Constructing a CultureMain MenuConstructing a CultureIntroduction: A Snapshot in TimeSensible SchoolingSetting the Stage for Visual CultureSee and Hear!Incorporating Audio-Visual Education into the ClassroomLife Adjustment MovementPhilosophy of education in which students are "adjusted" to American life.Films in the ClassroomNew Film Helps GirlsCreating a Visual Culture through Print MediaIn the Beginning: A Brief History of LIFE MagazinePost War Teen TuningThe Building Blocks of Visual CultureAboutThis page describes the methodology behind the developed. Team member introductionBibliographyMaureen Kudlik07ec8ebdd0fbeaba49b25d2b198d84b9712cd0d6Micah Ariela1e838a35a85c5d3e09b44fd8da4e45888d7b1efJessica Martineze6106ba1d3fdd6a087256fecb73a84263965399aVince Sandrif1c5ba0a4f7b96b251ed23b27f5bd5ddc781e56b
The Educational Screen Journal review of "The Story Of Menstruation."
The Educational Screen Journal informed instructors of new films useful in the classroom. The review of "The Story of Menstruation," a film produced by the Walt Disney company, was pivotal in removing the stigma and embarrassment associated with menstruation. The film then led to a widespread publication, being shown in classrooms across America.
This film was hailed for the constant effort that was seen in the finished product, both in terms of the high production values, and in the straightforward manner that the topic was presented. The author of the review makes it a point to show that even the title "The Story of Menstruation"was neither sugarcoated nor treated women as inferior, such as similar films of the era tended to do.