What
The Common Core ELA Standards Document Omits
Wednesday June 2, 2010
Statement by Frank W. Baker, media education consultant, founder of the
Media Literacy Clearinghouse
“Today’s digital natives reside in a world in which they consume, and are
exposed to, more visual messages than print. Reports from the Kaiser Family
Foundation and others remind us regularly how much media young people use and
consume. It is unfortunate that the release of the final Core Standards for
English Language Arts has turned a blind eye to this fact.
One of the most important questions in media literacy is ‘what is left out of a
message’ and it is clear that what is omitted from the Common Core ELA standards
released today is any reference to both visual literacy and media literacy.
When the draft of the ELA core standards was recently released for public
comment, we provided the reviewers with 6
separate quotes from national educational organizations, including the
National Council of Teachers of English, which reflected the importance of
teaching with and about non-print texts. Yet the writers of the core standards
have chosen to ignore this.
Because each state can add 15% to this document, I call on those representatives
in each of the 50 states to not only consider what is in the document, but also
what is not. There is plenty of evidence (and resources) that today’s ELA
classroom must include media (and other non-print) as texts. I can tell you
that I will be working, here in South Carolina, with the State Department of
Education, to ensure that both visual and media literacy are included in what
our state requires teachers to teach and students to learn.”
For more information, contact Frank Baker (media literacy ed consultant)
fbaker1346@aol.com (803) 254-8987
Related:
Moving Forward With
Media Literacy;
Why
Media Literacy Matters