TEACHERS TALK MEDIA LITERACY

 

Anyone who has ever tried to bring an innovation to a school site or whole system, has encountered the phrase, "how are we going to do this, in addition to everything else we are already doing."? With that in mind, we wanted to see how classroom teachers, media specialists and technology coordinators respond to media literacy when they return to school from some initial training. The following represent some of the comments from North Carolina teachers.





   
Case Study #1 - Wanda

Case Study #2 - Mary

Case Study #3 - Kathy

Case Study #4 - Ramona 

Case Study from CI 3850  



 

Case Study #1 - Wanda

It was amazing! As I started reviewing the Social Studies Standard Course of Study Framework developed by the State Board of education North Carolina Department of Public Instruction for the public schools of North Carolina, I found that it could have been called the Media Literacy Standard Course of Study.

One of the first essential questions to be asked of students in the content overview section addressing the Role of Disciplines in the K-12 Social Studies Curriculum is, "What can we learn from the past about how new technologies result in broader unanticipated social change? "What a wonderful time to bring in an African folk tale and discuss with the children how information in our society is presented to us differently today than it was in the past. I would also present the Jack Tales of our own Appalachian Mountain culture and use a Venn diagram to graph the differences in the past and modern day technologies.

Listed under the Rationale for Social Studies in the School Curriculum International Perspective is the statement: "All our technological advances make the world an even smaller place, in which the power of the individual for good or evil is immensely increased." Students must be taught the responsibilities of concerned citizens. They must be aware of the ways in which producers of television programs and advertisements are presenting their products and directly targeting certain gender, age or interest groups with products and productions. They need to know how quickly information is now passed from one source to another and how technology has changed the way people live. Another area related to media technology is the Rights and Responsibilities section. It reads, "Our notion of literacy must extend beyond fundamentals as traditionally conceived." Public schools have a responsibility to inform students of their rights and liberties and should give students a civic education and a body of knowledge to access, analyze, evaluate, and communicate ideas and information. Students need to feel empowered before they will be able to make decisions for themselves in order to avoid negative peer pressure and corrupt advertisers. Cultural Transmission in the Social Studies Curriculum expresses to educators that, "As the nation has grown, become less isolated, become more pluralistic and has been affected by advancing technology, civic education has become more complex." What a wonderful chance to discuss with students how certain cultures are represented in the media.

They should become aware of how the media stereotype different social groups and how people's emotions are affected by these stereotypes. Teenagers are often portrayed as being rude, loud, and uncaring, in newspapers and on television. In order to understand the issue better, students could research and present their findings about media stereotypes.

Today it is possible to know more about our world faster and easier than ever before. It is the task of social studies education to make sense of this changing knowledge of our world by placing it in perspective. Students must be encouraged to get the whole picture before making judgments on issues. They must be told how news broadcasts use certain angles and methods to present images the way they want them to appear.

When I took a group of fifth graders to Washington D.C., they were able to discover a certain trick the media use to present the news. A street vendor had set a camera in front of a backdrop of the president, allowing anyone to appear to be shaking hand with a world leader. Many of my students did this and took pictures home to their parents. Through this experience, my students became aware of how news reporters could appear to be standing in prominent places when they actually were in studios.



Continued in next column.

 

 

The curriculum states, "Since we cannot predict what specific knowledge and behavior will be demanded in the future, we must concentrate on educating citizens who will be able to solve problems that cannot presently be foreseen. Tomorrow's citizens must effectively analyze information, resolve problems, and make informed choices. Since the future is uncertain, it is necessary to prepare students to be scholarly, exercise leadership, and support democratic ideals." I believe in the order to accomplish these tasks in our global society, students must learn to be reflective and realize that what has happened in the their past affects how they view issues today. Also, students must learn to look at problems and events from the viewpoints of others and know that others have had different experiences. Different people may interrupt similar situation differently because of their backgrounds.

The Framework Goals declare, "A balanced and effective K-12 social studies program prepares students to be active, informed, and responsible citizens." How can students increase their awareness of the world, the nation, or their states unless they are media literate? We have more information than ever at our fingertips, but unless it can be put into perspective, it will be useless to the students. Media must be questioned and analyzed for meaning before students will ever be informed and responsive citizens. Never before in history have children had so many tools available to them.

 

Under the section "Changing Nature of Knowledge," the curriculum informs us that, "Technology provides increasingly easy access to databases that are cross-disciplinary and multidisciplinary, as well as to scholarly works." By knowing where and how to access information children will be able to gather data faster than ever before. But knowing how to apply the information and check the reliability of it is just as important.

To answer the question, "What is social studies?" the curriculum replies, "The primary purpose of social studies is to help young people develop the ability to make informed and reasoned decisions for the public good as citizens of a culturally diverse, democratic society in an interdependent world." Another "Essential Question" raised in the content overview is, "How can we manage technology so that the greatest number of people benefit from it?" I believe this is an area where students must learn to work together in groups and develop common projects. President Clinton stated that 90% of the people who lost their jobs did so because they could not work with others. Media allows opportunities for students to plan and complete projects collectively, learning how to value and listen to the ideas of others.

In the area of primary/elementary economics students are expected to distinguish between needs and wants and to prioritize each. Teachers can implement units on advertising and its effects on children and adults. By helping students become aware of how advertisers manipulate reality, educators can help students distinguish between needs and wants.

 

"Social studies programs should include experiences that provide for the study of how people organize for the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services," according to the state curriculum. One such experience could have students deciding on products they want to produce and sell. They could produce advertising videos to be shown to the schools; run ads in their school newspapers; and send flyers to other students in their classes. Through this exercise, students could both learn production skills and gain better understanding of the media's effects.

The North Carolina Social Studies Standard Course of Study Framework provides many opportunities for the elementary teacher to integrate medial literacy into the social studies curriculum. This will help students learn critical thinking skills and become more informed citizens.

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Media Literacy: 1999 National Conference

Media Literacy and Adolescents

Media Literacy: Barry Duncan's Class at Appalachian

Media Literacy and Juvenile Justice

Media Literacy and North Carolina Curriculum Connections

Media Literacy and Presidential Politics

Media Literacy: An Introduction to Media Literacy by Dr. David Considine

Media Literacy: ASU's Management Model

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Media Literacy: First National Media Literacy Conference at ASU

Media Literacy: From Television to Telling-Vision

Media Literacy, Health and Medical Issues

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Media Literacy in North Carolina

Media Literacy: The Purposes and Rationale

Media Literacy Stipends & Summer School 2001 

Media Literacy: Summit 2000: Reflections on Toronto Conference

Putting the ME in MEdia: Student Reflections

Support Telemedium: The Journal of Media Literacy

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