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1. MEDIA AND INFORMATION LITERACY

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  1. What is media and information literacy? (Basic meaning)
    7 Topics
    |
    3 Quizzes
  2. MIL history and reasons why it appears?
    7 Topics
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    3 Quizzes
  3. Practical Approaches to Media Literacy in the World
    7 Topics
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    3 Quizzes
  4. Post-modernic MIL theories
    7 Topics
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    3 Quizzes
Lesson 2, Topic 4
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Evolution and ecology of media and information literacy terminology

Mil 9 September 2021
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Keywords or types of MIL:

  • Advertising literacy
  • Cinema/film literacy
  • Computer literacy
  • Digital literacy
  • Freedom of expression and information literacy
  • Games literacy
  • Information literacy
  • Internet literacy
  • Library literacy
  • Media literacy
  • News literacy
  • Television literacy

At the heart of any discussion of the information sciences, at least when this discussion is held in the English language, lies the problem of the variant, and shifting, set of concepts and meanings of the terms `library’ and `information’. The term `information’, in particular, has a variety of meanings in different contexts and communities of discourse, providing an excellent example of Wittgenstein’s `language game’. This implies that any terminology built around this central concept is in danger of being constructed on `shifting sands'(Bawden 2001)

Virginia Woolf once spoke (29 April 1937) words do not live in dictionaries, they live in the mind. That is why concepts and meanings shifts. However, to understand how these meanings are constructed we have to understand basics of literacy terminology.

“Words, English words, are full of echoes, of memories, of associations – naturally. They have been out and about, on people’s lips, in their houses, in the streets, in the fields, for so many centuries. And that is one of the chief difficulties in writing them today – that they are so stored with meanings, with memories, that they have contracted so many famous marriages.”[1]

If we are still afraid of Virginia Woolf[2] or the echoes and associations of words, media and information language, we will not move past the basics. That is why we need to look at the diversity of MIL terminology and what does it mean (table 1)[3]

TerminologyWhat does it mean?
AccessThe ability of media consumers to produce their own texts and to have those texts acknowledged by the agenda setting media. Also, the ability of media consumers to respond to the dominant media.
Agenda-settingThe ability of the media to tell people what and whom to talk and think about. Also refers to those media that have more credibility than their competition.
AnalogMedia software which has a physical quality and presence.
AudienceThe group of consumers for whom the media text was constructed as well as anyone else who is exposed to the text.
BrandingThe process by which a commodity in the marketplace is known primarily for the image it projects rather than any actual quality.
CensorshipThe practice of suppressing a text or part of a text that is considered objectionable according to certain standards.
Connote/ConnotationA description of value, meaning or ideology associated with a media text that is added to the text by the audience.
Construct or ConstructionThe process by which a media text is shaped and given meaning through a process that is subject to a variety of decisions and is designed to keep the audience interested in the text.
ConsumersThe audience for whom a commercial media text is constructed and who responds to the text with commercial activity.
ConvergenceThe merging of previously separate communication industries such as publishing, computers, film, music and broadcasting, made possible by advances in technology.
CriticalA reflective position on the meaning, biases or value messages of a text.
Critical AutonomyThe process by which a member of the audience is able to read a media text in a way other than the preferred reading. Also used to describe the ability of media literacy students to deconstruct texts outside the classroom.
Critical ViewingThe ability to use critical thinking skills to view, question, analyze and understand issues presented overtly and covertly in movies, videos, television and other visual media.
CutAn edited transition between two images in which one image is immediately replaced by another.
DeconstructionThe process by which the audience identifies the elements that make up the construction of meaning within a text.
DemographicsMeasurable characteristics of media consumers such as age, gender, race, education and income level.
Denote/DenotationA description of a media text indicating its common sense, obvious meaning.
DigitalThe storage and transmission of information by reducing it to digits and then reassembling it for an exact reproduction.
DocudramaA filmed dramatization based on fact that combines documentary and fictional elements. In the production process, “based on” allows the creators of the text wide creative latitude and a docudrama is, at best, a skillful representation of a real person or event.
DominantWhen a text is read by the audience in a way that is intended by the creators of the text.
FlakAn organized attempt to influence media content, which can take the form of letters, phone calls, petitions, lawsuits and legislation.
GenreA category of media texts characterized by a particular style, form or content.
HardwareThe physical equipment used to produce, distribute and exhibit media texts.
Hegemony/hegemonicWhen dominant groups persuade subordinate groups that the dominant ideology is in their own best interests. The media’s function in this process is to encourage maintenance of the status quo.
HomophobiaThe fear of homosexuality as expressed by demeaning images in media texts.
HTML (Hypertext Markup Language): is a computer programming language that allows people to create links on the world wide web from one source of information to another in any order.
Ideology/IdeologicalHow we as individuals understand the world in which we live. This understanding involves an interaction between our individual psychologies and the social structures that surround us. Mediating between these are the individual processes of communication as well as the technological processes of the mass media. These ideas are usually related to the distribution of power.
Industry:The agencies and institutions involved with the production of media texts. The term is also used in a more restrictive sense to describe the commercial production of media texts for the purpose of making a profit.
IntertextualityWhen a media text makes reference to another text that, on the surface, appears to be unique and distinct.
JoltsMoments in a media text that are generated by a broad comedy, a violent act, movement within a frame, a loud noise, rapid editing, a profanity or a sexually explicit representation, all of which are calculated to engage an audience’s excitement.
MarketingThe way in which a product or media text is sold to a target audience.
Mass MediaMass media refers to those media that are designed to be consumed by large audiences through the agencies of technology.
Media EducationTraditionally, it’s the process by which one learns the technical production skills associated with creating media texts. More recently, it has also included the intellectual processes of critical consumption or deconstruction of texts.
Media LiteracyThe process of understanding and using the mass media in an assertive and non-passive way. This includes an informed and critical understanding of the nature of the media, the techniques used by them and the impact of these techniques.
MediumThe singular form of media, the term usually describes individual forms such as radio, television, film, etc.
MediaThe plural form of medium; the term has come to mean all the industrial forms of mass communication combined.
MonopolyAny commercial process in which one seller controls prices and supply of a product.
“Moral Panic”A sudden increase in public perception of the possible threat to societal values and interests because of exposure to media texts.
NarrativeHow the plot or story is told. In a media text, narrative is the coherent sequencing of events across time and space.
NegotiateThe process of give and take by which members of the audience interpret, deconstruct and find meaning within a media text.
OppositionalA critical position that is in opposition to the values and ideology intended by the creators of a media text, usually the dominant reading of a text.
Prime TimeThat part of a radio or television schedule expected to attract the largest audience.
ProductionThe industrial process of creating media texts as well as the people who are engaged in this process.
Production ValuesDescribes the quality of a media production proportional to the money and technology expended on the text.
Product placementThe process by which manufacturers or advertisers pay a fee in order for branded products to be prominently displayed in a movie, TV show or other media production.
PropagandaAny media text whose primary purpose is to openly persuade an audience of the validity of a particular point of view.
PsychographicsA more sophisticated form of demographics that includes information about the psychological and sociological characteristics of media consumers such as attitudes, values, emotional responses and ideological beliefs.
RepresentationThe process by which a constructed media text stands for, symbolizes, describes or represents people, places, events or ideas that are real and have an existence outside the text.
SoftwareThe programs written for computers or the media texts that can be played on them.
StereotypesA form of media representation by which instantly recognized characteristics are used to label members of social or cultural groups. While often negative, stereotypes can contain an element of truth and are used by the media to establish an instant rapport with the audience.
Studio SystemThe factory-like production system in Hollywood by which movies were made from about 1925 to 1955.
SynergyThe combination of two separate media texts or products that share similar characteristics so that one helps market the other.
TechnologyThe machinery, tools and materials required to produce a media text. In media literacy terms, technology greatly impacts upon the construction and connotation of a text.
TextThe individual results of media production: a movie, a TV episode, a book, an issue of a magazine or newspaper, an advertisement, an album, etc.
TransparencyThe quality of a media text by which it appears to be natural rather than constructed.
Vertical IntegrationThe process by which a media company acquires another elsewhere in the production process.
VirtualSomething which is a representation rather than the real thing. In advertising, the word “virtually” means “almost.”
Word-of-mouthInformal way in which media products become known by audiences.
World Wide WebThe World Wide Web is the network of pages of images, texts and sounds on the Internet which can be viewed using browser software.

The terminology above is unfinished and constantly changing as media itself is evolving. However, at the center of MIL discourse is the word literacy, but it varies based on the type of media forms and genres we are using. It can be media in general, or a specific medium. For example computer literacy, film/cinema literacy or social media literacy. Here you will find the different variations of literacies and what do we talk about when we talk about a specific type of media[4].

Media ecology theory is the study of media, technology, and communication and how they affect human environments. The theoretical concepts were proposed by Marshall McLuhan in 1964, while the term media ecology was first formally introduced by Marshall McLuhan in 1962. [5]

Besides variations of MIL terminology, the ecology (figure 3) dimensions is also important to understand. In the era of sustainable development we are also talking about sustainable MIL or MIL for the sustainable development goals[6]. What is an ecosystem of MIL in the context of SDG[7], how different types of media literacy works together. We go back to the beginning here, to the types or keywords of MIL.

Figure 3: MIL Ecology

Notions of MIL or ecology of MIL is UNESCO’s model:

This UNESCO model MIL Curriculum and Competency framework for teachers is intended to provide teacher education systems in developed and developing countries with a framework to construct a program for turning out teachers who are media and information literate. UNESCO also envisions that educators will review the framework and take up the challenge of participating in the collective process of shaping and enriching the curriculum as a living document. For this reason, the curriculum focuses only on required core competencies and skills which can be seamlessly integrated into existing teacher education without putting too much of a strain on (already overloaded) teacher trainees.

MIL has become an important part of education system as well as important part of our daily lives, especially in this physical distance digital society. If we want to continue this hitchhiker’s journey through MIL galaxy, we have to understand how it was created. Has it started with an big bang?

Questions and tasks

  1. What is media ecology?
  2. Draw a model of MIL ecology.
  3. How MIL is connected with sustainable development goals agenda?
  4. Why MIL is an important part of education curriculum?
  5. What Virginia Woolf meant when she said: words do not live in dictionaries, they live in the mind  and how it is connected with MIL outcomes?

References

Bawden, David. 2001. “The Shifting Terminologies of Information.” Aslib Proceedings 53(3):93–98. doi: 10.1108/EUM0000000007043.


[1] https://www.speech.almeida.co.uk/words-fail-me

[2] Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? is a play by Edward Albee first staged in October 1962. It examines the complexities of the marriage of a middle-aged couple, Martha and George.

[3] https://www.medialit.org/reading-room/language-media-literacy-glossary-terms

[4] What We Talk About When We Talk About Love is a 1981 collection of short stories by American writer Raymond Carver, as well as the title of one of the stories in the collection.

[5] https://media-ecology.wildapricot.org/What-Is-Media-Ecology

[6] https://www.nordicom.gu.se/en/publikationer/media-and-information-literacy-sustainable-development-goals

[7] The Global Challenge for Government Transparency: The Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) 2030 Agenda. In 2015, 195 nations agreed with the United Nation that they can change the world for the better.

This will be accomplished by bringing together their respective governments, businesses, media, institutions of higher education, and local NGOs to improve the lives of the people in their country by the year 2030. https://worldtop20.org/global-movement?gclid=Cj0KCQjw9YWDBhDyARIsADt6sGa4bnXyBRq2uJOwqXpedjHxxYeNAwp0kBW8YjS5awixK1yN8hqR1J4aAqbBEALw_wcB