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21st Century Literacy Skills All Teachers

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Summer Leadership Institute 2006. The current critical need ' ... (Source: Media Literacy Resource Guide, Ministry of Education Ontario, 1997) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 21st Century Literacy Skills All Teachers


1
21st Century Literacy Skills AllTeachers
Students Need to Succeed
  • Frank W. Baker
  • fbaker1346_at_aol.comMedia Literacy Clearinghouse
  • http//medialit.med.sc.edu

Summer Leadership Institute 2006
2
The current critical need
  • Economic forecasters and business analysts
    are predicting that jobs in the 21st
    centurywill require information processing
    skills. ..media literacy (is one of these)...
    Merely teaching reading and writing is no longer
    sufficient..
  • Source Janet Murray, Contemporary
    Literacy Essential Skills for the 21st Century
    MultiMedia Schools Magazine, March/April 2003

3
The need for media literacy
  • "Our young people need to be educated to the
    highest standard in this new information age, and
    surely this includes a clear awareness of how the
    media influences, shapes, and defines

Former USSecretary of EducationRichard Riley
their lives. .Media literacy courses can give
young people the power to recognize the
difference between entertainment, television that
is just bad and the information they need to
make good decisions.
4
Recommending media literacy
  • American Assn of School Libraries
  • Cable In The Classroom
  • International Reading Assn.
  • National Communication Assn.
  • Natl Board of Prof Teaching Standards
  • Natl Council for Teachers of English
  • National Middle School Assn.

5
Why teach media
  • Movies, advertisements, and all other visual
    media are tools teachers need to use and media we
    must master if we are to maintain our credibility
    in the coming years.Jim Burke, fromThe
    English Teachers Companion

6
Media Literacy Critical Skills Knowledge for
the 21st Century
Generation M media multi-tasking
7
Media Literacy Critical Skills Knowledge for
the 21st Century
  • 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

8
Media Literacy Critical Skills Knowledge for
the 21st Century
  • While more young people have access to the
    Internet and other media than any generation in
    history, they do not necessarily possess the
    ethics, the intellectual skills, or the
    predisposition to critically analyze and evaluate
    their relationship with these technologies or the
    information they encounter. Good hand/eye
    co-ordination and the ability to multitask are
    not substitutes for critical thinking.
    Dr. David Considine, media educator

9
Media Literacy Critical Skills Knowledge for
the 21st Century
  • "It is incumbent upon our educational system to
    prepare its students with the skills necessary to
    be able to approach the media criticallythe
    middle school years are an ideal time to teach
    media literacy." Marie Davies, The impact of
    the mass media upon the health of early
    adolescents. Journal of Health Education, 1993

10
Media Literacy Critical Skills Knowledge for
the 21st Century
  • What is media literacy?
  • OR
  • Why is it important that ourstudents be media
    literate?

11
Media Literacy Critical Skills Knowledge for
the 21st Century
  • 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. 
    (Source Media Literacy
    Resource Guide,
    Ministry of Education Ontario, 1997)

12
Media Literacy Critical Skills Knowledge for
the 21st Century
  • Media literacy
  • the ability to---
  • access, analyze, evaluate produce
  • communication(both print electronic media)

Source 1992 Aspen Institute Natl. Leadership
Conf.
13
Media Literacy Critical Skills Knowledge for
the 21st Century
  • Media literacy empowers people to be both
    critical thinkers and creative producers of an
    increasingly wide range of messages using image,
    language, and sound. It is the skillful
    application of literacy skills to media and
    technology messages. As communication
    technologies transform society, they impact our
    understanding of ourselves, our communities, and
    our diverse cultures, making media literacy an
    essential life skill for the 21st century.
    Source Alliance For A
    Media Literate America, 2000

14
Media Literacy Critical Skills Knowledge for
the 21st Century
  • What is media literacy?
  • Set of skills, knowledge abilities
  • Understanding how media work and produce meaning
  • Awareness of personal media use
  • Critical thinking applied to media messages
  • Appreciation of media

15
What media literacy is NOT
  • A separate course
  • Expensive
  • Media bashing
  • Judging whether media or good or bad
  • Just television or video production
  • Teaching with media rather it is teaching about
    the media

16
Media Literacy Critical Skills Knowledge for
the 21st Century
1999 study finds media literacy in all
states standards
17
Media Literacy Critical Skills Knowledge for
the 21st Century
  • Partnership for 21st Century Skillswww.21stcentu
    ryskills.orgInformation Communication
    Technology (ICT) Map

18
Media Literacy Critical Skills Knowledge for
the 21st Century
  • English, Language Arts 8th grade
  • demonstrate the ability to distinguish
  • between fact and opinion compare and
  • contrast information and ideas make
  • inferences with regard to what he/she
  • has viewed

19
Media Literacy Critical Skills Knowledge for
the 21st Century
20
Media Literacy Critical Skills Knowledge for
the 21st Century
  • All media are constructions
  • Media use their unique languages with their own
    set of rules
  • Media convey values points-of-view
  • Different people see the same media messages
    differently
  • Media are about power profit

Source Center for Media Literacy
21
Media Literacy Critical Skills Knowledge for
the 21st Century
  • Who produced/paid for the message?
  • What is its purpose?
  • Who is the target audience?
  • What does the message mean?
  • Who or what might be left out?
  • What techniques are used to attract attention and
    increase believability?

22
Understanding the visual
  • Visual literacy slides

23
The languages of TV Film
  • CAMERAS
  • Position (perspective) Movement (pan, tilt)
  • Lens (zoom in, pull out)
  • LIGHTS
  • SOUND (music, sound effects)
  • EDITING (post production)
  • ACTOR EXPRESSIONS WARDROBE

24
Thinking Critically About Media
  • Schools should incorporate media literacy
    education throughout the curriculum, not just in
    English classes, and at all grade levels.
  • Technology, and its use by students to produce
    their own media, is a key component to media
    literacy education.
  • Source http//www.ciconline.org/uploads/C
    IC_Media_Literacy_Report.pdf

25
Thinking Critically About Media
  • School districts and colleges of education should
    increase professional-development efforts to
    reflect the importance of media literacy
    education.
  • Parents should play an important role in media
    education, too. School districts can encourage
    their participation by holding workshops for
    parents and conducting other outreach efforts.
    Source http//www.ciconline.org/uploads/CIC_Med
    ia_Literacy_Report.pdf

26
Recommendations
  • Schedule professional development workshops on
    this topic
  • Help teachers see the media/education links
  • Recruit school library media specialists to
    identify needed resources which correlate to
    state standards
  • Give students opportunities to create and produce
    media and showcase those
  • Support stronger media literacy standards

27
Schedule a teacher workshop
  • Frank W. Baker
  • fbaker1346_at_aol.com
  • Media Literacy Clearinghouse
  • www.frankwbaker.com
  • A national Leader In Learning finalist May
    2005
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