Media Literacy in School
and at Home
by Omar Benton Ricks
Are children learning to think critically
about the things that
shape their world? This is a question many parents and educators
have on their minds, especially with regard to media. The average
American child ages 8 to 18 watches over 6 hours of TV a day and
uses other media (including the Internet) an additional 2 hours a day [6].
Scholars estimate that by the age of 18, children in the
will have spent more than 16,000 hours in front of the TV set, compared
with only 14,000 hours in the classroom [2].
With their children having that kind of exposure, most parents are
concerned about their children's use of media -- what Web sites they visit,
what movies and TV shows they watch, and what music they listen to.
Over many years, this concern has led to
the implementation of
practices and regulations intended to protect children from negative
influences in the media. Industries now have ratings for movies, music CDs,
video games, and TV programming. Some parents have begun to take action
on their own -- from reducing the amount of time children watch TV or videos, to
getting a TV that has a V-chip (an electronic device that allows
parents to control what shows a child watches), to putting computers in
conspicuous areas of the home so it is easier to monitor what the child is doing
on
the computer.
Recently, the President approved
legislation to provide a domain
extension of "G"-rated Web sites for children [4].
But are these protective methods enough to
keep children safe from
the negative influences in the media?
Empowering Children
Many parents and educators think that
preventive measures cannot do
enough by themselves. Children, they say, must be educated on how
the media operates and come to see the media as something that can help or
harm them. To accomplish this end, some groups have created media
education resources to encourage schools and parents to prepare children to
participate in the world of information by asking questions and
thinking critically.
The
education is the effort to teach children how "to access, analyze,
evaluate and communicate information in a variety of forms including print and
non-print messages" [1]. A big part of media literacy involves
learning to find the not-so-hidden motives -- usually commercial in nature --
that
underlie all media. In learning to identify the many methods used
in the media to influence their choices -- including nonverbal techniques like
camera angles,
audio/visual editing, and special effects -- children can learn to
think more critically about what they see on TV, hear on CDs, and read on the
Internet.
Children can learn both how to protect themselves and why it is
important to do so.
Objective: Media Literate Students
Also called media literacy, media education
is a subject area that
has recently begun to gain widespread acceptance in
although other countries have included media literacy curricula for decades.
Almost all states have begun to require some element of media
literacy in their statewide standards, and a few have adopted media literacy
curricula [3; 7].
Cyndy Scheibe is an associate professor of
psychology at
that helps teachers to integrate media literacy lessons into their classes. She
says that
media literacy is more than just "critical analysis and awareness
of images." She says, "Being able to express yourself in multiple
forms of literacy
is very empowering for kids." She likens teaching children about
understanding and producing media to teaching them about poetry. "We don't
just have
students read and memorize other poets," she says. "They also write
their own"
(Cyndy Scheibe, personal communication,
same, she says, must be true of any effort to teach students about
print and non-print communication media.
Many media educators say that media
literacy should be considered a
part of traditional literacy (Cyndy Scheibe, personal
communication, 13 November 2002; [8], p. 60). They argue that, given the extent
to which
today's children receive and create information using non-print
media, it is no longer sufficient to see literacy as merely a print proposition.
Media literacy in the classroom can take
many forms.
Age-appropriate activities are available at the following Web
sites:
http://www.ithaca.edu/looksharp/library/
http://www.msde.state.md.us/assignment_media_lit/Elementary/elementary.html
http://www.msde.state.md.us/assignment_media_lit/Middle/middle.html
http://www.msde.state.md.us/assignment_media_lit/High/high.html
http://www.media-awareness.ca/eng/med/class/teamedia/tupe.htm
http://www.media-awareness.ca/eng/med/class/teamedia/tujs.htm
http://www.media-awareness.ca/eng/med/class/teamedia/tmintro.htm
http://www.media-awareness.ca/eng/med/home/medwise.htm
Parents Play a Major Part
There are many examples of home lessons
that can be used to foster
media literacy.
Scheibe mentions one simple game that
parents can start playing
with their preschool-age children: "Guess What They're Selling."
Here is how it works:
1) Watch TV
with your child.
2) When the
commercials come on, ask her to guess what product
this advertisement is trying to sell to her.
This game can help her learn to recognize
that there is a
distinction between commercials and programs. It may also help her
to learn that media is used to sell people things they may or may not want (Cyndy
Scheibe,
personal communication,
"As children get older," Scheibe
says, "they may begin to learn to
identify the ways commercials use special effects to make products
look bigger, what information gets left out, and how ads play loose with
facts"
(Cyndy Scheibe, personal communication,
Children may also discover for themselves
how the creation of media
messages involves the omission of information. Scheibe describes a
second-grade social studies unit about understanding communities that was used
in a diverse school district that included students from rural,
urban, and suburban communities. Teachers wanted their students to understand
what
people mean when they say they live in a rural, urban, or suburban
community. The teachers gave their students disposable cameras and asked them to
use the cameras to document the types of communities in which they
lived. The parents had been notified about this project and were asked to help
their children with collecting images representative of the
communities in which they lived. Teachers then electronically scanned the
students' pictures
and used computer software to create documentary films, narrated by
the students,about the community. The teachers and students from different
schools then got together and shared these films with each other.
Scheibe recounted some of the discussion questions teachers asked:
What does it
mean to say that ours is a rural, urban, or
suburban community? Do these pictures include only people who
look nice? Do they include people from certain occupations? Do they include
pictures of the garbage? (Cyndy Scheibe, personal
communication,
"This kind of community showing is
really empowering for kids,"
Scheibe says. "It provides a deep way of understanding what type of
community they live in" and presents a pedagogical alternative to simply
teaching
the students that they live in a certain type of community (Cyndy
Scheibe, personal communication,
can create media messages.
Advancing Media Education in
Although many state and local school
districts have adopted media
literacy components or curricula, the
lags behind many other countries (including other English-speaking countries
such as
integrating media literacy into the curriculum [5]. One major impediment to
furthering media education is the need for in-service teacher
training and teacher education to include media literacy. Few if any teacher
education programs
include coursework in media literacy as a requirement for
graduating teachers (Cyndy Scheibe, personal communication,
teachers probably teach some form of media literacy when they
require students to do things like comparing and contrasting a variety of
sources in
writing assignments, most teachers have not received support in
teaching media literacy.
If states continue to integrate media
literacy into their statewide
standards, Scheibe believes that it will likely become essential
for colleges of education to offer training in media literacy in the future (Cyndy
Scheibe,
personal communication,
There is a lot of further information about
media literacy on the
Web. See the additional resources below. And look for future Parent
News articles on this timely topic.
Acknowledgment
The author would like to thank Dr. Amy
Aidman of the
For More Information
About-Face
http://www.about-face.org/
Action Coalition for Media Education
http://www.acmecoalition.org/
Alliance for a Media Literate America
http://www.nmec.org/
Association for Media Literacy
http://www.aml.ca/
Center for Media Education
http://www.cme.org/
Center for Media Literacy
http://www.medialit.org/
Children, Adolescents, and Television
http://www.aap.org/policy/re0043.html
Has Media Literacy Found a Curricular
Foothold?
http://www.edweek.org/ew/ewstory.cfm?slug=09ubey2.h19
Just Think
http://www.justthink.org/
Mastering the Media: The Graduate Program
in Media Literacy at
Appalachian State University
http://www.ci.appstate.edu/programs/edmedia/medialit/
Media Awareness Network
http://www.media-awareness.ca
Media Education Foundation
http://www.mediaed.org/
Media Literacy Clearinghouse
http://www.med.sc.edu:1081/
Media Literacy for Drug Prevention: A Unit
for Middle School Educators
http://www.nytimes.com/learning/teachers/NIE/medialiteracy/
Media Literacy Online Project
http://interact.uoregon.edu/MediaLit/HomePage
Media Literacy Project
http://www.reneehobbs.org/
Media Literacy and Youth
http://leep.lis.uiuc.edu/publish/medialit
This is a web site on media literacy
designed by graduate students
in Dr. Amy Aidman's information science course.
Media Matters
http://www.aap.org/advocacy/mmarticles.htm
Media Workshop New York
http://www.mediaworkshop.org/
MediaStudies.com
http://www.mediastudies.com/
New Mexico Media Literacy Project
http://www.nmmlp.org/
Project Look Sharp
http://www.ithaca.edu/looksharp/
Speaking, Listening, and Media Literacy
Standards for K Through 12
Education
http://www.natcom.org/Instruction/k-12/K12Stds.htm
Talking with Kids about the News
http://www.talkingwithkids.org/television/twk-news.html
Sources
[1] Alliance for a Media Literate America (AMLA).
(n.d.). Media
literacy [Online]. Available: http://www.nmec.org/medialit.html.
[2] Comstock, George A., & Paik, Hae
Jung. (1991). Television and
the American child.
[3] Maryland State Department of Education
(MSDE). (n.d.).
Assignment: Media literacy [Online]. Available:
http://www.msde.state.md.us/assignment%5Fmedia%5Flit/home.html.
[4] McGuire, David. (2002, December 4).
President signs "dot-kids"
legislation.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?pagename=article&node=&contentId=A8016-2002Dec4¬Found=true.
[5] Media Awareness Network. (n.d.). Media
education around the
world [Online]. Available:
http://www.media-awareness.ca/eng/med/bigpict/worlmtxt.htm.
[6] Roberts, Donald F. (2000). Media and
youth: Access, exposure,
and privatization. Journal of Adolescent Health, 27(Supplement),
8-14.
[7] State-by-state media frameworks (n.d.).
[Online]. Available:
http://www.med.sc.edu:1081/statelit.htm.
[8] Tyner, Kathleen R. (1998). Literacy in
a digital world :
Teaching and learning in the age of information. Lea's
Communication Series.
Erlbaum.
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[NPIN Editor's note (
http://www.edrs.com/Express.cfm]. Journal
articles are available
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reproduction clearinghouses such as Ingenta (800-296-2221).
* * * * *
> where can I locate this document?
> http://npin.org/pnews/2003/pnew103/int103b.html
Note: the above website
has been taken down. thus I have reproduced this article
as the new web master cannot guarantee it will be reappear.