Media Literacy Fundamentals

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MEDIA LITERACY FUNDAMENTALS

What is Media Literacy?

Media are powerful forces in the lives of youth. Music, TV, video games, magazines and other media all
have a strong influence on how we see the world, an influence that often begins in infancy. To be engaged
and critical media consumers, kids need to develop skills and habits of media literacy. These skills
include being able to access media on a basic level, to analyze it in a critical way based on certain key
concepts, to evaluate it based on that analysis and, finally, to produce media oneself. This process of
learning media literacy skills is media education.
The importance of media education in Canada can be seen through the inclusion of media literacy
outcomes in provincial and territorial curricula. But defining exactly what media education and media
literacy are – and how best to integrate them into the classroom – isn’t always straightforward.
This section has been created to clarify what media literacy is all about, and to offer practical suggestions
to help you make media education happen

 What is Media Education?
 Why Teach Media Literacy?
 Key Concepts for Media Literacy
 Tips for Integrating Media Literacy in the Classroom
 Media Literacy across the Curriculum
 Assessing and Evaluating Media Literacy Work
 Media Education in Canada: An Introduction

What is Media Education?

Media education is the process through which individuals become media literate – able to critically
understand the nature, techniques and impacts of media messages and productions.
Media education acknowledges and builds on the positive, creative and pleasurable dimensions of popular
culture. It incorporates production of media texts and critical thinking about media to help us navigate
through an increasingly complex media landscape. That landscape includes not only traditional and
digital media, but also popular culture texts such as toys, fads, fashion, shopping malls and theme parks.
Teachers don’t have to be media experts to incorporate media education in the classroom, because it is all
about asking questions.
For example:

 Who is the audience of a media production and why? From whose perspective is a story being told?
 How do the unique elements and codes of a specific genre affect what we see, hear or read?
 How might different audiences interpret the same media production? Because media issues are complex
and often contradictory, the educator’s role isn’t to impart knowledge, but to facilitate the process
of inquiry.

Today, the chief challenges are to locate and evaluate the right information for one’s needs and to
synthesize what one finds into useful knowledge or communication. Media literacy – with critical
thinking, reflection and ethical behaviour at its core – is a key part of what it means to be educated in
today’s world.

Why Teach Media Literacy?

Why teach media literacy? Here are ten good reasons:

1. Media literacy encourages young people to question, evaluate, understand and appreciate their
multimedia culture. It teaches them to become active, engaged media consumers and users.
2. Media education brings the world into the classroom, giving immediacy and relevance to traditional
subjects such as History, English, Health, Civics and the Creative Arts. It serves as a perfect bridge for
subject integration and interdisciplinary studies.
3. Media education embodies and furthers current pedagogy, which emphasizes student-centred learning, the
recognition of multiple intelligences, and the analysis and management – rather than just the simple
storing – of information.
4. Media education is grounded in the sound pedagogical approach of starting learning where kids are at.
The media – music, comics, television, video games, the Internet and even ads – are a part of life that all
kids enjoy. Media create a shared environment and are, therefore, catalysts for learning.
5. Media education encourages young people to use multimedia tools creatively, a strategy that contributes
to “understanding by doing” and prepares them for a workforce that increasingly demands the use of
sophisticated forms of communication.
6. In a society concerned about growing youth apathy to the political process, media education engages
young people in “real-world” issues. It helps young people to see themselves as active citizens and
potential contributors to public debate.
7. In a diverse and pluralistic society, the study of media helps youth understand how media portrayals can
influence how we view different groups in society: it deepens young people’s understanding of diversity,
identity and difference.
8. Media literacy helps young people’s personal growth and social development by exploring the
connections between popular culture – music, fashion, television programming, movies and advertising –
and their attitudes, lifestyle choices and self-image.
9. Media literacy helps children critique media representation, teaching them to distinguish between reality
and fantasy as they compare media violence and real-life violence, media heroes and real-life heroes, and
media role models and real-life roles and expectations.
10. With most Canadian students turning first to the Internet for research, media education is an essential
component of Information Communications Technology education, assisting young people in developing
critical thinking skills and strategies for optimizing searches, evaluating and authenticating information
and examining issues of plagiarism and copyright.

Key Concepts for Media Literacy

Media educators base their teaching on key concepts for media literacy, which provide an effective
foundation for examining mass media and popular culture. These key concepts act as filters that any
media text has to go through in order for us to critically respond. To teach the key concepts to students
see the resources in our Media Minutes program.
1. Media are constructions
Media products are created by individuals who make conscious and unconscious choices about what to
include, what to leave out and how to present what is included. These decisions are based on the creators’
own point of view, which will have been shaped by their opinions, assumptions and biases – as well as
media they have been exposed to. As a result of this, media products are never entirely accurate
reflections of the real world – even the most objective documentary filmmaker has to decide what footage
to use and what to cut, as well as where to put the camera – but we instinctively view many media
products as direct representations of what is real.
Ask:

 Who created this media product?


 What is its purpose?
 What assumptions or beliefs do its creators have that are reflected in the content?

2. Audiences negotiate meaning
The meaning of any media product is not created solely by its producers but is, instead a collaboration
between them and the audience – which means that different audiences can take away different meanings
from the same product. Media literacy encourages us to understand how individual factors, such as age,
gender race and social status that affect our interpretations of media.
Ask:

 How might different people see this media product differently?


 How does this make you feel, based on how similar or different you are from the people portrayed in the
media product?

3. Media have commercial implications


Most media production is a business and must, therefore, make a profit. In addition, media industries
belong to a powerful network of corporations that exert influence on content and distribution. Questions
of ownership and control are central – a relatively small number of individuals control what we watch,
read and hear in the media. Even in cases where media content is not made for profit – such as YouTube
videos and Facebook posts – the ways in which content is distributed are nearly always run with profit
in mind.
Ask:

 What is the commercial purpose of this media product (in other words, how will it help someone
make money)?
 How does this influence the content and how it’s communicated?
 If no commercial purpose can be found, what other purposes might the media product have (for instance,
to get attention for its creator or to convince audiences of a particular point of view).
 How do those purposes influence the content and how it’s communicated?

4. Media have social and political implications


Media convey ideological messages about values, power and authority. In media literacy, what or who is
absent may be more important than what or who is included. These messages may be the result of
conscious decisions, but more often they are the result of unconscious biases and unquestioned
assumptions – and they can have a significant influence on what we think and believe.
As a result, media have great influence on politics and on forming social change. TV news coverage and
advertising can greatly influence the election of a national leader on the basis of image; representations of
world issues, both in journalism and fiction, can affect how much attention they receive; and society’s
views towards different groups can be directly influenced by how – and how often – they appear
in media.
Ask:

 Who and what is shown in a positive light? In a negative light?


 Why might these people and things be shown this way?
 Who and what is not shown at all?
 What conclusions might audiences draw based on these facts?

5. Each medium has a unique aesthetic form


The content of media depends in part on the nature of the medium. This includes the technical,
commercial and storytelling demands of each medium: for instance, the interactive nature of video games
leads to different forms of storytelling – and different demands on media creators – that are found in film
and TV.
Ask:

 What techniques does the media product use to get your attention and to communicate its message?
 In what ways are the images in the media product manipulated through various techniques (for example:
lighting, makeup, camera angle, photo manipulation)?
 What are the expectations of the genre (for example: print advertising, TV drama, music video) towards
its subject?

Tips for Integrating Media Literacy in the Classroom

Although media literacy is now a part of the official curricula of every province and territory, it’s all too
often left out or given cursory treatment in classrooms. This is the result of a variety of factors, such as
limited access to equipment, teachers’ lack of confidence with the material, and especially the perception
of media education as a “frill” in an age of standardized testing and comprehensive curricula.
Here is some advice for making media education a meaningful and integrated part of your
classroom practice:

1. EXPLOIT “TEACHABLE MOMENTS”


When students have free time, take an opportunity to listen to what they’re talking about. Most likely, it’s
related to the media they watch, play and listen to! Breaking news stories, blockbuster movies, and
celebrity meltdowns are all great opportunities for media analysis.

2. GIVE STUDENTS A CHANCE TO CREATE MEDIA, NOT JUST ANALYZE IT


Although there’s more to media education than just creating media, this is a key part of it: there’s no
substitute for hands-on experience to help kids understand how things like editing and music can
influence the way a movie or TV show affects us emotionally. Camera phones, storyboards and even
magazine collages are all affordable and easy options for bringing media production into your classroom.

3. START AND END WITH THE KEY CONCEPTS


Media education and the media world, can feel overwhelming when you start to analyze it. By always
coming back to the key concepts of media literacy you can keep from getting sidetracked as you analyze
media products or cultural artifacts.

4. RECOGNIZE THAT KIDS – AND ADULTS – ENJOY MEDIA


It’s important not to take a negative approach to media education. Teach kids that critiquing is not
necessarily the same thing as criticizing and that we can identify and talk about problematic issues in the
media we love without losing our enjoyment of them. Don’t forget to look at positive examples when
discussing things like gender, stereotyping and so on.

5. TEACH ABOUT MEDIA, NOT JUST WITH MEDIA


It is not enough to use media in your classroom unless students are learning about media as well. Any
time you’re using media in the classroom, look for a media education opportunity: for instance, if you’re
showing the movie version of a play or book, have students analyze the differences between the two using
the key concepts. How are the commercial considerations of a movie different from those of a book or a
play? What technical differences change how the story is told? How are the expectations of a movie
audience different from those of a play or a book? How are the film-makers’ values and assumptions
similar to, or different from, the original author’s? How do all of these differences affect the explicit or
implicit meaning?

6. MAKE MEDIA EDUCATION ABOUT ASKING QUESTIONS, NOT LEARNING ANSWERS


Even though you may feel strongly about an issue or a media product, give your students room to come to
their own conclusions. This is especially important when you’re dealing with issues such as stereotyping
or body image, where your students (and you!) likely already have strong opinions: you need to model the
practice of keeping an open mind and using a critical analysis, not your emotions, to lead you to
a conclusion.

7. FIGHT THE PERCEPTION THAT “IT DOESN’T MATTER”


Students often try to avoid talking about the implications of media products by saying “it’s only a TV
show” – or a video game, or a music video, or so on. Remind students that media can have meaning even
if the creators didn’t plan it, and that we rely as much on the media as on anything else to tell us about the
world. For instance, research has shown persuasively that media consumption can affect how we see
others and how we see ourselves, even if we don’t realize it – a condition known
as implicit or unconscious bias – and the presence or absence of different groups in media has been shown
to affect how people feel about those groups.

8. ASSESS AND EVALUATE MEDIA LITERACY WORK


“Will this be on the test?” By doing formal assessment and evaluation of the media literacy work students
do, you communicate to them that it is valuable and important. Make sure that your evaluations are as
well thought-out and objective as they are for all your other assignments, and keep them consistent: when
in doubt, return to the key concepts to gauge your students’ knowledge, understanding, insight and skill.
See Assessing and Evaluating Media Literacy Work for tips on how to do this.

9. LET STUDENTS BRING THEIR OWN MEDIA TO THE TABLE


To get students more engaged, look for opportunities for them to do media literacy work with their choice
of media products. You can deal with concerns about content issues by making your expectations clear
and a part of the evaluation scheme (ethical and responsible use of media is a key part of media
literacy) and by having students only present excerpts of media products in group or whole-class settings.

10. KEEP UP-TO-DATE WITH MEDIA TRENDS AND DEVELOPMENTS


you don’t have to be a media expert to teach media literacy, but it helps to be current about what kids are
watching, playing, reading, wearing and listening to, not to mention what they’re doing online. This is a
great opportunity to let kids be the experts and teach you about the latest thing!
Media Literacy Across the Curriculum

Media education has a place in nearly every course and subject. You can see our  Curriculum Charts to get
specific information on how each of our lessons and resources meets the curriculum of different courses
in your province or territory. Here are some ideas just to get you started:
Social Science: In History classes, students can look at how their views of history and historical events
have been shaped by media. Studying films, newspapers and even their own textbooks can help students
see how the nature of each medium shapes how history is told. In Geography and World Issues classes,
students can analyze how news coverage influences how we view different parts of the world – and the
people who live there.
Science: How are students’ views of science, and what scientists do, shaped by media? Where does the
idea of a “mad scientist” come from, and where do we see this trope today? How do the commercial
demands of newspapers and TV news influence reporting of science stories?
Family Studies: How are families depicted in different media? How has this changed with time? Do
media portrayals of family follow trends in society, or do they influence them (or both)? What do various
media products popular with youth say about gender roles, and how do youth interpret these messages?
Health and Physical Education: What influence does media consumption have on what we eat? How does
it affect our decisions about smoking, drinking, and drug use? What kinds of relationships do we see
modeled in media products popular with youth, and what messages do youth take from them? How do
digital media such as cell phones and the Internet affect our relationships with others, and how can we
maintain healthy relationships using these media?
Music: How do the commercial pressures of the music industry affect the creation of music? How are
things like gender, class, relationships, or alcohol and drug use depicted in music (and music videos), and
how do youth interpret these messages? How do different musical genres and styles (pop, rock, hip hop,
R&B, etc.) influence the content of music and music videos? How are musicians portrayed in media, and
how does that influence how youth see them?
Law: How do media products popular with youth portray crime and the criminal justice system? How are
these portrayals influenced by the values or assumptions of the media creators, by commercial
considerations, or by the influence of different genres (cop shows, action games, etc.)? How are digital
media affecting our views on issues such as intellectual property, hate speech, harassment and defamation
of character?
Visual and Fine Arts: How do artists use, appropriate and deconstruct media products to create new art?
What rights and responsibilities do artists have towards the original media creators or owners?

Assessing and Evaluating Media Literacy Work

As with any subject, it’s important that work students do in developing their media literacy is assessed
and evaluated. Students need regular feedback to be able to reflect on their progress and develop mastery,
and this also tells them that the work they’re doing is an important part of the course. However, teachers
sometimes find it more difficult to create assessment and evaluation tools for media education than for
other subjects. This may be because they feel they lack the technical knowledge to evaluate work in the
medium in question; it may also be that since media education is all about finding the right questions to
ask, rather than learning previously determined answers.
There are two important steps to creating objective, comprehensive and meaningful assessment and
evaluation tools for media literacy work. The first is to use an evaluation tool such as a  rubric that allows
you to assess work in more than one way and that makes expectations clear to students. The second is to
frame the expectations within the rubric in terms of the key concepts of media literacy.
In general, media literacy work can be evaluated in three ways:

1. Based on how well the student understands the key concepts of media literacy and the specific concepts
and ideas being explored in the lesson or assignment.
2. Based on the depth and quality of the student’s inquiry and analysis of the questions raised in the lesson
or assignment, as well as the student’s thoughtfulness in identifying issues and questions to examine.
3. Based on how well the student applies specific technical skills associated with either the medium being
studied (movies, TV, video games, etc.), the medium used in the evaluation tool, or both.

Within each of those four areas, you can create expectations using questions based on the key concepts:
1. Media are constructions:
Does the student show an understanding of how the media product was created? (Few media products
are made by a single author. What were the different contributions of different creators to the
final product?)
How well does the student analyze how the creators’ beliefs or assumptions are reflected in the content?
2. Audiences negotiate meaning:
Does the student show an understanding of this concept, and of what elements in a medium or a
particular product would be relevant to it? Can the student identify the intended audience of a media
product, as well as which other possible audiences might view it differently?
How well does the student identify and analyze the ways that different audiences might view the media
product differently?
3. Media have commercial implications:
Does the student show a knowledge and understanding of the commercial factors influencing the
creation of this media product? Does the student show a knowledge and understanding of how the media
product was financed and who owns it?
How well does the student analyze how the content of the media product was influenced either by
commercial factors or by who created and/or owned it?
4. Media have social and political implications:
Does the student show an understanding of this key concept? Does the student show a knowledge and
understanding of how this medium communicates ideas and values? (For example, what kinds of
characters are present and which kinds are absent? Who is shown in a positive light, and who is shown in
a negative light? Who is shown as having control over their lives, and who is not?
How well does the student analyze the significance of the conscious or unconscious, explicit or implicit
messages identified in a media product?
5. Each medium has a unique aesthetic form:
Does the student show a knowledge and understanding of the technical elements of the medium and the
tropes, clichés, codes and conventions of the medium (TV, movies, video games, etc.) and genre
(situation comedies, documentaries, role-playing games)?
How well does the student analyze how the use of these technical elements and genre tropes influence the
conscious or unconscious, explicit or implicit messages identified in media product? (How are elements
such as music, costuming, and shot composition used to influence our opinion of a character in a movie?
How are characters given or deprived of agency, control and power in a video game?)
For all of the key concepts, you can evaluate any work according to the following terms:
How well does the student apply knowledge of the key concepts and of the medium being studied? How
well does the student apply knowledge of the medium of the evaluation tool? For instance, if the student
is writing an essay about a TV show, he or she would be expected to apply an understanding of how TV
shows are created and how they convey meaning, both explicitly and implicitly, and also to apply their
knowledge of how to write a successful essay by using an effective structure, well-developed and
supported arguments, correct spelling and grammar, and so on. (Successful use of process steps such as
editing, checklists and pre-evaluation assessment can be included here as well.) If the product being
studied and the evaluation use the same medium – a mock print ad being used to deconstruct magazine
advertising, for instance – the student would still be evaluated separately on how they apply their
knowledge to analyze magazine ads and how they apply their knowledge to create the mock ad.
Now that you’ve figured out the expectations of your evaluation tool, you need to determine how
students will show achievement. This is often done on a scale of one to four (sometimes represented as
“Insufficient” and then numbers one to four). To create a scale, start by writing what you want your
students to do in Level Three and work up and down from there. This can be done in two ways:

1. By using exact, quantitative expectations. For example, if you want a Level Three student to


successfully identify four ways in which the product communicates messages about gender, then a Level
Two might successfully identify three ways, a Level One two ways, an Insufficient one or zero
ways and a Level Four five or more ways.
2. By using qualitative descriptions of the work you want to see. If you define Level Three as
being competent work, for example, you might define Level Two as developing work, Level One
as beginning work, Insufficient as failing work and Level Four as confident work.

Each of the approaches has its own strengths and weaknesses: quantitative expectations are generally
better because there is little or no ambiguity, but using them too much can change the emphasis from
thinking and analysis to following procedure and “checking all the boxes.” Most often you’ll use a
mixture of the two, using quantitative expectations to evaluate knowledge and application of specific
skills and using qualitative expectations to evaluate inquiry and analysis.
A final tool that is extremely helpful in evaluating media literacy work is giving students exemplars.
These are examples of evaluation pieces that show students what you’re looking for in a competent work.
Annotate the exemplar to make clear what it does right and go through it with the class when you give out
the assignment. (Make sure the exemplar is different in some key way from the assignment – an analysis
of a different movie, for example – to avoid having students simply copy it.) The easiest source of
exemplars is your own students’ work, but if you are doing an assignment for the first time you can either
create one yourself or have a peer helper or a more senior student create one.

Media Education in Canada: An Introduction

Canada is considered a world leader in this field. But there’s still a long way to go before the subject is
integrated fully into Canadian classrooms.
Media education is “on the books” with outcomes for media education included across the curriculum and
media education programs being implemented in pockets and districts throughout the country. Still, the
quality and practice are uneven and media education is not yet widely taught in all provinces and
territories or at all levels.
Research findings support the notion that media literacy needs to start at the very early stages of learning.
At the elementary level, media literacy education is often “hidden” in the Language Arts strand. It may be
referred to as “viewing and representing” or “oral and visual communication”. Although it is a mandated
curriculum area, teachers at the elementary level have very few resources available to them and very little
in the way of professional development to support them. With the disappearance of the school librarian
and other specialists in most elementary schools, classroom teachers have become “generalized
specialists” in many areas, one of which is media education. Teachers and parents are eager to help their
children become media wise, and they are open to new ideas, skills and strategies that will help them in
this regard.
Media educators have identified an urgent need to increase professional development opportunities, to
update the approach to reflect the digital wireless landscape, and to integrate the disciplines of media
analysis and media production across the curriculum in Canada’s education system.

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