Home | Business News | Browse by Publication | A | Academic Exchange Quarterly

Integrating media literacy into the curriculum.

Publication: Academic Exchange Quarterly
Publication Date: 22-SEP-06
Format: Online
Delivery: Immediate Online Access

Article Excerpt
Abstract

Media literacy education is required by most state curricular in this country. It is still not taught systematically in our schools. Teachers are worried about adding a new subject to their already crowded curriculum. This article addresses this problem by showing teachers that by nature media literacy encourages an interdisciplinary approach to education. Teachers can make connections across content areas by teaching with media and about media. This article demonstrates how media literacy education can be integrated into every subject we teach through classroom examples.

**********

As our global village continues to be wired up electronically, and as we move our daily lives online, mass media play a tremendous part in our society, providing information as well as entertainment (Clay, 2003). Young people today live media saturated lives, spending an average of nearly 6.5 hours a day with media (Kaiser Family Foundation Study, 2005). Virtually all that we know about the world beyond our immediate experience comes to us through mass media, TV, Radio, Internet, etc. There would be little problem with this if the media simply reflected reality. But each medium shapes reality in different ways and we can no longer consider any message in any medium to be neutral or value free. All the messages that we come in contact with contain information about values, beliefs, and behaviors and are shaped by economic factors (Ontario Ministry of Education, 1989). Tyner (2003) suggests that new digital media departs from traditional media insofar as it facilitates non-linear browsing, privileges interactivity, allows for the manipulation of sound, text, stills, and moving images, and can perform these task at rapid speeds. "If students are to use new media to their own greatest advantage, they too must learn to creatively and critically browse, research, organize, select, and produce communication forms that use the full spectrum of literacy tools available to them" (Tyner, 2003, p. 374). Thus, traditional literacy (reading and writing)_alone is far from enough for our students to be successful in the 21st century. Becoming literate in the new century means that students also need to understand the influence of media on our society, develop strategies to critically analyze media and become independent from the influence of media.

Media literacy refers to the understanding of media...

View this article FREE - Now for a Limited Time, try Goliath Business News
Free for 3 Days!



More articles from Academic Exchange Quarterly
Self-assessment: grading or knowing?, September 22, 2006
Assessing the wizards.(K-12 curricula), September 22, 2006
Media literacy and student/teacher engagement., September 22, 2006
Upward influence and grades in higher education., September 22, 2006

Looking for additional articles?
Search our database of over 3 million articles.

Looking for more in-depth information on this industry?
Search our complete database of Industry & Market reports by text, subject, publication name or publication date.

About Goliath
Whether you're looking for sales prospects, competitive information, company analysis or best practices in managing your organization, Goliath can help you meet your business needs.

Our extensive business information databases empower business professionals with both the breadth and depth of credible, authoritative information they need to support their business goals. Whether it be strategic planning, sales prospecting, company research or defining management best practices - Goliath is your leading source for accurate information.