UNESCO International Conference Media and Information Literacy
Submitted by:
Tessa Jolls
President and CEO
Center for Media Literacy
With content being infinitely available through technology today, it is the process skills of media literacy which must be taught, applied and internalized by new generations of avid media consumers. CML has pioneered since 1989 in identifying these process skills and in developing teaching and learning tools which insure that these skills can be shared and amplified in a world where being an effective information manager, a savvy consumer, a responsible producer and an avid participant in media culture is now a necessity for effective citizenship.
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Is this new scientific study on diet and weight valid?
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What are the implications of ranking friends on a social networking site?
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What does a "photo-op" mean?
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Key Words
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Deconstruction: CML’s 5 Key Questions (Consumer)
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CML’s 5 Core Concepts
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Construction: CML’s 5 Key Questions (Producer)
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1
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Authorship
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Who created this message?
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All media messages are constructed.
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What am I authoring? |
2
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Format
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What creative techniques are used to attract my attention?
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Media messages are constructed using a creative language with its own rules.
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Does my message reflect understanding in format, creativity and technology? |
3
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Audience
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How might different people understand this message differently?
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Different people experience the same media message differently.
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Is my message engaging and compelling for my target audience? |
4
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Content
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What values, lifestyles and points of view are represented in or omitted from this message?
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Media have embedded values and points of view.
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Have I clearly and consistently framed values, lifestyles and points of view in my content? |
5
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Purpose
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Why is this messagebeing sent?
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Most media messages are organized to gain profit and/or power.
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Have I communicated my purpose effectively? |
Q/TIPS serves as a "metaframe" that teachers, students and parents can grasp and begin to use immediately as a starting point; as training, curricula and assessments are built around the metaframe, the inquiry process deepens and takes hold as the central methodology for critical thinking and learning across the curriculum. Furthermore, this metaframe is an easier way to introduce 21st century skills than some of the more complex frameworks which, although representing desirable outcomes, are very difficult to implement and engage teachers.
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Efficient information managers. We need to access information quickly and be able to store information effectively so that we can access it again.
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Wise consumers. We need to understand the messages that come our way and make wise individual decisions, using the information we have.
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Responsible producers. Today, everyone can be a producer, and in producing, it is important for all of us to consider the audience and the society we live in, to provide an enlightened approach to media production.
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Active participants. In using media, in deciding to buy products or to cast or ballot, we are sending messages and voting and participating in society. We not only buy a product or a service, but we buy an organization’s advertising and communications, and we buy the worldview that the organization’s communication represents. Our votes count, and so does our own expression. Where would a company or a university or a nonprofit or an entertainer or an executive or a politician be without us, the audience?
Retrieved October 22, 2009, from http://www.21stcenturyskills.org/downloads/P21.Report.pdf