Difference between revisions of "Medialiteracy"

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(New page: =Media Literacy Resources= <h3> *Philadelphia conference: Rebooting the News<br> http://www.rebootingthenews.org <br> *The consensus statement from Philadelphia<br> http://www.mediagiraf...)
 
(TWO QUESTIONS)
 
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*Philadelphia conference: Rebooting the News<br>
 
*Philadelphia conference: Rebooting the News<br>
 
http://www.rebootingthenews.org <br>
 
http://www.rebootingthenews.org <br>
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*The consensus statement from Philadelphia<br>
 
*The consensus statement from Philadelphia<br>
 
http://www.mediagiraffe.org/wiki/index.php/Reboot-statement
 
http://www.mediagiraffe.org/wiki/index.php/Reboot-statement
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*"News Literacy" -- the pilot curriculum from Stony Brook<br>
 
*"News Literacy" -- the pilot curriculum from Stony Brook<br>
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http://www.mediagiraffe.org/node/573
 
http://www.mediagiraffe.org/node/573
  
*Here's is a list of Media Literacy resources from the suspended Media Literacy Online Project at the University of Oregon. It's former project coordinator, Gary Ferrington, (garywf@uoregon.edu) retired in 2001 and the site is no longer maintained.  The resources below were found April 4, 2006 at this URL: <br>
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==TWO QUESTIONS==
http://interact.uoregon.edu/Medialit/mlr/readings/contents/news.html<br>
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http://interact.uoregon.edu/medialit/MLR/home/index.html<br>
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#There are so many sources of resources for media-literacy education. Frank Baker's Media Literacy Clearinghouse is great. But they are scattered and uncoordinated. Is there a need for any kind of formalized national clearing house? Government or NGA funded?
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#What about a weekly five-minute update that keys off the news and includes perhaps a three-minute summary of a major national issue in the news followed by two minutes of directed activities for the viewing students? Is this something Newsy could help with?

Latest revision as of 01:30, 16 July 2009

Media Literacy Resources

  • Philadelphia conference: Rebooting the News
http://www.rebootingthenews.org
  • The consensus statement from Philadelphia
http://www.mediagiraffe.org/wiki/index.php/Reboot-statement
  • "News Literacy" -- the pilot curriculum from Stony Brook
http://www.mediagiraffe.org/node/671
  • The Stony Brook conference on news literacy (fall 2008)
Proposal unveiled to hire 50 laid-off journalists to teach "news literacy" to non-journalism college majors
http://www.mediagiraffe.org/stonybrook
http://www.mediagiraffe.org/wiki/index.php/Stonybrook
  • AUDIO: Media literacy hits the real world -- lessons from Boston English
http://www.mediagiraffe.org/node/573

TWO QUESTIONS

  1. There are so many sources of resources for media-literacy education. Frank Baker's Media Literacy Clearinghouse is great. But they are scattered and uncoordinated. Is there a need for any kind of formalized national clearing house? Government or NGA funded?


  1. What about a weekly five-minute update that keys off the news and includes perhaps a three-minute summary of a major national issue in the news followed by two minutes of directed activities for the viewing students? Is this something Newsy could help with?