Title: Media Literacy: Critical thinking about media
1Media Literacy Critical thinking about
media
- Frank W. Baker
- Fbaker1346_at_aol.com
- Media Literacy Clearinghouse
- www.frankwbaker.com
2Generation M digital natives
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4- College students and high-school students
preparing to enter college are sorely lacking in
the skills needed to retrieve, analyze, and
communicate information that is available online
only 13 percent of the test-takers were
information literate. The
Chronicle of Higher Education, October 17, 2006
5What students need to know
- Adolescents need to learn how to integrate
- knowledge from multiple sources, including
- music, video, online databases and other media.
- They need to think critically about
- information.they need to participate in the
- kinds of collaboration that new communication
- and information technologies enable, but
- increasingly demand.
Bruce Bertram, Diversity and Critical Social
Engagement How Changing Technologies Enable New
Modes of Literacy in Changing Circumstances
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7- 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
8What is media literacy?
- Take the next few minutes to draft
- your own definition.
9Media literacy is
- The ability to
- Access
- Analyze
- Interpret
- Produce
- communication in a variety of
forms
10- "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. "
11With the advent and popularity of
YouTube,Current TV, and similar venues, young
people have become media producers.
DIY (do it yourself)
12What media literacy is
- Set of skills, knowledge, abilities
- Awareness of personal media habits
- Understanding of how media works
- Appreciation of medias power/influence
- Ability to discern critically question/view
- How meaning is created in media
- Healthy skepticism
- Access to media
- Ability to produce create media
13What media literacy is not
- media bashing
- protection against media
- just about television
- just TV production
- how to use AV equipment
- only teaching with media
- it is also teaching about the media
145 Key Concepts in Media Literacy
1. All Media Are Constructions
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165 Key Concepts in Media Literacy
- 2. Media languages with unique rules
The Language of FilmCamerasLightsAudio
(sound, music)EditingSet DesignCostumeActors
expressionsMakeup
The Language of IMBRBBe Right
BackPOSParent Over ShoulderLOLLaughing out
Loud
175 Key Concepts in Media Literacy
- 3. Media convey values points-of-view
185 Key Concepts in Media Literacy
- 4. Different people experience the same media
differently
195 Key Concepts in Media Literacy
FOX (News Corp) NBC (NBC/Universal) CBS
ABC (Disney) CNN (AOL/Time Warner) VIACOM
20Impact of media consolidation
- Media consolidation comes at the expense of
ethnic diversity and serving the interests of
women and minoritiesBenton Foundation/Social
Science Research CouncilOctober 23, 2006
21TV
- What would your students
- say is the purpose of
- television?
22Audience-Advertiser-Program
You are broughtto the sponsorby the program.
- This
- program
- is brought to
- you by the
- sponsor.
23Media literacy in the classroom
- Assignment Media Literacy
Introductory video
24ML in Ohio Teaching Standards
- English Language Arts
- Communication Oral Visual StandardB. Explain
a speakers point of view and use of persuasive
techniques in presentations and visual media.
25English examples
- Non-print texts (TV, film, music)
- Understanding bias stereotypes
- Analyzing techniques of persuasion
- (for example in advertising)
- The language of TV/film (camera work, lighting,
music) - Visual literacy (photography)
- Blogging graphic novels
26ML in Ohio Teaching Standards
- Social Studies9th grade
- -identify sources of propaganda, describe the
most common techniques, and explain how
propaganda is used to influence behavior
27Social Studies examples
- Analyze/produce editorial cartoons
- Examine historical photographs
- Study past/present propaganda
- History of U.S. mass media
- Understand communications policy
- Analyze political advertising
28ML in Ohio Teaching Standards
- Health
Alcohol, Tobacco Other Drugs - Investigate how alcohol/tobacco company ads
target young people - Examine media portrayal of body shape/
- /type
29Health examples
- How media market consumer products
- Nutrition messages (i.e. junk food)
- Alcohol tobacco advertising
- Body image and the media
- Media messages about sex
30ML in Ohio Teaching Standards
- VISUAL ART
- Identify examples of visual culture (e.g.
advertising, political cartoons, product design,
theme parks)and discuss how visual art is used
to shape people's tastes, choices, values,
lifestyles, buying habits and opinions.
31ML in Ohio Teaching Standards
- Library Media
- Benchmark A Explain the intended effect of
media communications and messages when delivered
by various audiences for various
purposesBenchmark B Examine a variety of
elements and components used to create and
construct media communications for various
audiences and various purposesBenchmark C
Critique and evaluate the intended impact of
media communications and messages when delivered
and received by society as a whole
32Media literacycritical thinking
- Who created/paid for the message?
- What is the messages purpose?
- Who is the message trying to reach?
- What techniques are used?
- Who or what might be left out?
- How do we know what it means?
- Who benefits from the message?
33Media literacycritical thinking
- What lifestyles are promoted and why?
- Does the message contain bias or stereotypes?
- What can I do with the information?
34Visual literacy
35If 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 JacobEd Consultant
36The languages of TV-Film
- CAMERAS (point-of-view)
- LIGHTS
- SOUND MUSIC
- EDITING (post production)
- SET DESIGN
- ACTOR wardrobe expression
37Examples
- Cell phone DOVE Political
Ads - script
38Film Examples
Opening Credits- symbolism Pocket Watch Fear-
lighting music
39Film Examples
In what ways does the director use techniques
which make us, the viewer, believe what we
see is actual Civil Rights footage?
1978 Docudrama