Title: Media literacy 101
1Media literacy 101
Berkeley County Reading and Writing Institutes
- Frank Baker
- media educator
- fbaker1346_at_aol.com
- Media Literacy Clearinghouse
- http//medialit.med.sc.edu
2Media literacy 101
- It would be a breach of our duties as teachers
for us to ignore the rhetorical power of visual
forms of media in combination with text and
soundthe critical media literacy we need to
teach must include evaluation of these media,
lest our students fail to see, understand, and
learn to harness the persuasive power of visual
media. NCTE Resolution on
Visual/Media Literacy
3Media literacy 101
4Media literacy 101
- Our students are growing up in a world saturated
with media messagesyet, they (and their
teachers) receive little or no training in the
skills of analyzing or re-evaluating these
messages, many of which make use of language,
moving images, music, sound effects.
Source R.Hobbs, Journal Adult Adolescent
Literacy, February 2004
5Media literacy 101
- American Association of School Libraries
- International Reading Association
- Natl Board of Professional Teaching Standards
- National Council for Teachers of English
- National Middle Schools Association
- Partnership for 21st Century Skills
- White House Office of National Drug Control Policy
6Media literacy 101
- What is media literacy?
- OR
- Why should your students become media literate?
7Media literacy 101
- Media literacy is concerned with helping
students develop an informed and critical
understanding of the nature of mass media, the
techniques used by them, and the impact of these
techniques. More specifically, it is education
that aims to increase the students' understanding
and enjoyment of how the media work, how they
produce meaning, how they are organized, and how
they construct reality. Media literacy also aims
to provide students with the ability to create
media products.Â
(Source Media Literacy Resource Guide,
Ministry of
Education Ontario, 1997)
8What media literacy is
9Media literacy in SC ELA
Elementary Middle High School
Recognize details, setting, characters and cause and effect in material from nonprint sources Demonstrate the ability to distinguish between fact and opinion, to compare and contrast info and ideas, and make inferences in regard to what is viewed Analyze nonprint sources for accuracy, bias, intent and purpose
10Media literacy 101
- "If video is how we are communicating and
persuading in this new century, why aren't more
students writing screenplays as part of their
schoolwork? Heidi Hayes Jacob
11Core Concepts
- All media are constructed
- Media are constructed using unique languages with
their own set of rules - Media convey values and points of view
- Audiences negotiate meaning
- Media Power Profit
- Source Center for
Media Literacy www.medialit.org
12All media are constructed
13What is this?
No, this is a PHOTOGRAPH of a horse.
14Media are constructed using unique languages with
their own set of rules
- Language of filmCameraLightsSound/MusicSetsEd
iting
15Media convey values and points-of-view
16Audiences negotiate meaning
17Media Power Profit
- Big 5 MediaFOX (News Corp) NBC
(GE) CBS (Viacom) ABC (Disney)CNN (AOL/Time
Warner)
What are the implications/ramifications if only 5
companies control magazines, newspapers, TV,
radio, newspapers, Internet, film, etc.?
18AdvertiserAudience
- This program
- is brought to
- you by the
- sponsor.
You arebrought tothe sponsorby the program.
19Critical thinking questions
- Who produces/pays for media?
- For what purpose(s) was it made?
- For which target audience(s)?
- What techniques does the messenger
- use to attract attention?
- Who or what is omitted and why?
- How do we know what it means?
- Does it contain bias or stereotypes?
20Techniques
21Techniques
22Techniques
23Techniques
24Techniques
25Techniques
The box of Oreos was not in the original NBC
Friendsit was placed there virtually for
DVD/syndication exposure
26Techniques
- well known
case - of the digital
- creation of a
magazine cover - featuring a
woman who does - not exist
27Body Image
- The subjective concept of one's physical
appearance based on self-observation and
reactions of others.
(American Heritage)
28Body Image- Studies
- Researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital in
Boston found that the more adolescent and
pre-adolescent girls read fashion magazines, the
more likely they were to diet and to feel unhappy
about their bodies. (USA Today
1/18/2006)
29Body Image- Statistics
- 69 of teens read a magazine in a typical day
Real Teens A Contemporary Snapshot of Youth
Culture ( by George Barna )
30Body Image- Statistics
- 42 of 1st-3rd grade girls want to be thinner
- 45 of boys and girls in grades 3-6 want to be
thinner - 37 have already dieted
- 6.9 score in the Eating Disorder range
- 51 of 9-10 year old girls feel better about
selves when dieting - 9 of 9 year old have vomited to lose weight
- 81 of 10 year olds are afraid of being fat
- 53 of 13 year old girls are unhappy with their
bodies - 78 of 18 year old girls are unhappy with their
bodies - The 1 wish of girls 11-17 years old is to lose
weight - source Body Wars Making Peace with Women's
Bodies by Margo Maine, Ph.D.
31Body Image- Studies
- "....unrealistically thin young women are often
used in advertisements for everything from soft
drinks to cars..... previous research has already
shown that such advertising contributes to
negative body images among young girls and
women." (UK News
story, Aug. 31, 2005)
32Body Image- Studies
- Males impacted "Action figures present
subtle messages of unrealistic role models
of well-sculpted, heavily muscled, 'perfect'
bodies that little boys see as their role
models. Sondra Kronberg, director and
co-founder of Eating Disorder Associates
Treatment Referral Centers
33Body Image- Studies
- According to statistics posted by the
National Institute on Media and the Family, by
age 13, some 53 percent of American girls are
unhappy with their bodies that figure grows to
78 percent by the time girls reach 17. In another
study on fifth graders, 10-year-old girls and
boys told researchers they were dissatisfied with
their own bodies after watching a music video
by Britney Spears or a clip from the TV show
Friends. And adolescent girls who viewed
commercials depicting unrealistically thin models
felt "less confident, more angry, and more
dissatisfied with their weight and appearance."
34Body Image Are things changing?
Just My Size Ad
35Body Image-Resources
www.jeankilbourne.com
36Other Resources
- CDC produced
curriculumhttp//www.cdc.gov/tobacco/mediashrp.ht
m
Media SharpAnalyzing Alcohol Tobacco Messages