Chamisa Mesa High School
Media Literacy
An Overview Inquiring Minds Want to Know:
What is Media Literacy?
Deborah Leveranz and Kathleen Tyner
The Independent August/September 1993
The Japanese call it johoshakai, the Age of Information, and if the
soothsayers are correct, it will change the world of the future as surely as
railroads transformed society in the nineteenth century. Instead of new
products and commodities, the telecommunication highway of the Age of
Information are positioned to transport a burgeoning commodity as old as
civilization: information. It remains to be seen if increased access to
information can improve the human condition, but is apparent that humans are
already awash in more information than the world has ever seen. Technology
pundits gleefully describe how it will be processed, packaged, and delivered
to every home. As people clamor for access to more and more information, a
niggling question remains: what are people going to do with all this
information once they receive it?
Media literacy offers an answer. The internationally recognized definition
of media literacy, and one used to mandate media literacy in Canada's public
schools, is "the ability to access, analyze, evaluate, and produce
communication in a variety of forms." Media literacy extends the traditional
notion of literacy to include electronic forms of communication. In fact,
media literacy is nothing new. It is the same old literacy with a fancy
name. Like print literacy, media literacy is a lifelong process And like
print literacy, the fact that people can make sense of words on a page
without moving their lips (or watch TV which talking on the phone) doesn't
necessarily mean they are literate.
Media education recognizes that raw information is probably worse than
useless if people do not have the skills to organize, evaluate, and make it
work for them. According to its champions, media education builds the
necessary information processing skills to negotiate contemporary society in
way that are both personally and socially satisfying.
Media literacy is not only about reading. Increases access to video
equipment, computers, and other new technologies means that consumers also
have the ability to produce their own messages. In 1992, there were 40,000
electronic bulletin board services in he United States. By 1993, the number
had skyrocketed to 60,000. consumer video equipment wed to computers offers
unforeseen avenues to produce and transmit words and pictures anywhere in
the world. People are desperate to learn how to use information
technologies. In its second year, the Multimedia Institute at San Francisco
State University has a waiting list of 300 students.
As people become more sophisticated media users, these skills carry a
tremendous potential for the revitalization of both education and the arts
in an Age of Information. Media education provides a structure for discourse
on diverse and sometimes polarized issues-independent versus mainstream
media., stereotyping versus alternative representation., consumerism,
propaganda, and censorship. It offers methods for articulate self-expression
about media information that can be transferred to a variety of personal and
civic purposes.
The discursive kind of literacy envisioned by media educators demand a
cultural, historical, economic, and social context for complete
understanding of media messages. The process begins when the reader mentally
questions mediated information in books, on television, and in all sorts of
pop culture messages. This process of questioning information is what media
literacy education is all about. As Elizabeth Thoman, executive director of
the Center for Media and Values in Los Angeles says, "Media literacy is not
about finding the right answers, but about asking the right questions."
Why should independent film/videomakers care about this media literacy
movement? It is for the development of audiences for alternative works? Or
to encourage future makers to carry on a tradition of personal vision works?
It is to provide an arena for discourse on the social and political impact
of society's self representations? It is to empower under-represented or
disenfranchised populations? There is no right answer, and there are many
other "right" questions.
A short history lesson
Media education in the United States probably began at the turn of the
century with the acceptance of the novel, considered a radical form of
popular culture at the time, in traditional schooling. It ahs enjoyed
popularity sporadically in this century, primarily as a reaction to the
introduction of new pop culture communication forms, such as comic books,
film, radio, and especially television. The typical position taken by media
educators throughout history, as each new medium was introduced, pitted
popular culture against fine arts, with media-the primary disserninators of
popular culture fare-clearly on the defensive. This protectionist stance
toward media was derived from assumptions based more on conventional wisdom
than on social science research-such assumptions as:1)Popular culture is
inferior to fine arts as a subject for study; 2)popular culture directly
causes anti-social behavior; 3)audience members have little control over the
power of media; 4)Americans would prefer classical books and music to
popular culture, once they were educated to enjoy them by those with
discriminating taste; and most of all, 5) even though "the business of
America is business," commercialism in any form is bad.
The problem is , who decides what is "good media" and how can "bad media" be
regulated? Short of the sheer force of will that adults can exercise over
children, the hope for early attempts at media education put stock in
"critical viewing: that allowed people to see the error of their popular
culture ways and self-regulate their use of media."
In this reactionary vein, the 1970's marked the first concerted effort to
involve elementary and secondary students in media studies thorough critical
viewing of television, fueled by a 1972 Surgeon Generals's Advisory
Committee on Television and Violence that pointed to a link between
television violence and anti-social behavior. Some highly public critical
viewing skills curricula were funded by the U.S. Department of Education,
including those developed at WNET-New York, Far West Laboratory in San
Fransico, and a number of private companies. Substantial school funding
allowed for production equipment purchases that fueled a renaissance of
mediamaking alongside critical viewing. This was augmented by the emergence
of the nascent media arts field., which came about in the mid-seventies when
the National Endowment for the Arts created a major media arts center
category, and the financial support and sanction was forthcoming from major
foundations, most notably Rockefeller. With a favorable funding climate and
a recognition of media as an arts discipline, numerous young people trained
in the schools went on to join forces with or start media arts centers.
Many of the media education efforts in the 1970's were recognized as
successful-from Sesame Street to Kodak's "visual literacy" curriculum to the
federal government's various programs providing financial support for
equipment in the schools. Nonetheless, media education came to be seen as
another educational fad with no real purpose. By the early 1980's, the
conservative "back-to-basics" movement in U.S. schooling choked off official
sanction for the fragile media education movement before it could take root.
A dwindling economy nearly killed it off.
New, improved media education
Ten years later, a revitalized brand of media education sprouted from
earlier critical viewing efforts. A hybrid of art, science, and education,
the media literacy movement of the 1990"s is more about education than it is
about media. Driven by a need to reform and restructure schools, it seeks to
revitalize education by positioning media arts, instead of the traditional
reading and writing is still about pencils and books, but it is also about
the symbolic and visual language of film, video, computers, and popular
culture texts.
The media education movement in the late twentieth century has much in
common with those who seek school reform, away from a factory model of
education that sees the student as a standardized end product to one that
offers learners an opportunity to direct their own learning. This method of
learner-centered education is not new. It was touted by John Dewey in
Democracy and Experience in Education during the last wave of Progressive
reform in the he late teens and early 1920's in the United States. Dewy
championed the need for hands-on experimental learning, democratic schools,
and inquiry-based methods of instruction. His attempts to bridge art and
science are of particular interest to those who produce hands-on media with
kids. He says, "Scientific and artistic systems embody the same principles
of the relationship of life to its surroundings, and both satisfy the same
fundamental needs."
The inquiry-based method of posting questions and encouraging students to
question classical "Socratic method" practiced by the ancient Greeks, who
ironically thought that the introduction of reading and writing was a
dangerous threat to oral culture, a premonition that was probably on target.
The two most prominent practitioners of school reform at this time are the
Foxfire teachers, begun in Appalachia and headquartered in Georgia, and the
Coalition of Essential Schools, a school reform effort begun by Professor
Ted Sizer at Brown University. Both of these reform movements address the
best teaching style and institutional setting for inquiry-based,
experimental, democratic, and student-centered learning and have chapters
operating nationwide.
Although the principles of school reform are generally popular, real reform
encounters resistance every step of the way in a skirmish of control over
public schools that involves issues of turf, economics, and culture. Whole
careers can tumble, as in the case when site-based management of local
schools is taken from mid-level educational bureaucrats. At its most basic,
the reform issue questions the power of the teacher, who is on some levels
an agent of the state, and elevates the power of students. As in any change,
school reform involves major shifts of power that are slow to implement and
quick to encounter obstructionist tactics.
In short, the school reform movement emphasizes: 1) student-centered
learning; 2) democratic classrooms; 3) hands-on, project based work; 4)
inquiry -based education; 5) research-based approaches; 5) alternatives to
standardized testing; and 6) cooperative learning. Those who practice media
education insist that the learning environment must include many of these
school reform elements and that media studies is not complete unless
students have experience in both analysis of media and hands-on production.
Proponents agree on other principles as well; 1) media are not "windows on
the world", but are carefully manufactured products with social, political,
and commercial implications; 2) even though media are not "real," they
affect people in real ways; 3) the McLuhanist idea that each medium has a
unique language that influences the content being delivered; 4) audience
members are not passive, but actively create meanings that sometimes subvert
the meanings intended by the producers.
Media educators stress that the primary goal of media education is not
merely to train future media workers or to provide students with outlets for
personal self-expression, but to foster the kind of critical autonomy it
takes to be informed citizens in a democratic society. If, the argument
goes, essential for an informed citizenry. As an emerging field, media
educators are striving for the goal of democratic citizenship from a variety
of approaches. The goal is to find common ground, shared principles, and an
articulated mission that unifies the various factions in media education so
that it can forge ahead as an integral part of American education.
The great divide
Ironically, media literacy suffers from too much of a good thing. It isn't
that no one knows what media literacy is. The problem is that everyone has
earnest ideas about how to go about it. Because each media eductor words
isolated circumstances, opportunities are rare for the kind of discourse
necessary to hammer out a broad consensus about the processes, skills, and
principles that constitute a complete course of media study.
This engenders some heated discussion in the small but growing discipline.
The debate centers around the goals and purposes of media education, but it
also includes strong opinions about how much structure media education
should include. Since media education is composed of two parts, analysis and
production, the debate usually splits along those lines, most often pitting
media artists, who tend to favor production, against reform-minded
educators, who think the analysis side of media education is most important.
Community access producers media professionals, and average citizens have
their own vocal notions about why we need media education and what path it
should take.
Those who favor analysis believe that production is important only as it
informs the analysis of mass media products. Generally speaking, the
analysis crowd is composed mostly of certified school teachers and
university educators who would like to see a formal and structured approach
to media study. Many of them have no production training and are often not
particularly comfortable with media technologies.
The production proponents, on the other hand, are mostly made up of media
artists who have seen firsthand the power of student production to increase
student self-esteem through self-expression and to offer a voice to those
who have been marginalized by mass media. The media artists complain that
the analysis component can be accomplished through a less-structured osmosis
process of learning by doing. Media artists have also see arts education
eroded in public schools and feel strongly about the need to strengthen the
arts though media arts education.
Hands-on video production has a tough enough time in public schools. Access
to equipment is usually a problem, and it is so alien to teachers and
administrators that they sometimes don't know what to do with it. Even so,
the teachers are curious about video, and there is some evidence that its
use in the classroom is exploding. A 1991 survey by the Corporation for
Public Broadcasting found that 56.4 percent of the California public schools
surveyed reported hands-on video production in the curriculum. Since video
production is almost never a part of teacher training, teachers need media
artists to help them use video to further their curricular goals. The
artists can also nudge teachers out of the amateur's trap of replicating
broadcast models of production (let's make a news show, tape the football
game, etc.) and into new and exciting formats for self-expression and
activism.
International media educators watch the U.S. media movement with amusement.
They marvel that the U.S. produces more media than any country on earth, but
that in education about media. Americans come in dead least. They chortle as
the U.S. gropes toward media education, because they've seen it all
before-20 years ago in their own countries.
The international context
It is not true that there is no concerted media education effort in North
America. In fact, Canada has mandated media literacy in Ontario (not
coincidentally the home of the late Marshall McLuhan). The Canadians
practice a form of media education sometimes called the U.K. (United
Kingdom) Model, owing to its refinement in Australia, Great Britain, and
Canada. Media education in those countries is well-established, across the
curriculum. Although most often found as part of the secondary curriculum,
it is beginning to be included as part of primary schooling, due in part to
the fact that every teacher in Ontario now has an opportunity to take media
studies classes in the course of his or her teacher training. The Canadians
may be the leaders in North America, but the Australians are widely
acknowledged to have the most experience in developing theory and practice
in media studies. The Australian Teachers of Media (ATOM) membership
fluctuate from 1,000 to 2,000 members, many of them beginning in "screen
education" in the 1960's. "Screen education" was the name given to film
studies at the time, and many of the principles are still used in analysis
of electronic media. ATOM members have produced hundreds of curriculum
frameworks, books, and teacher resources over the years and have proven
themselves to be a powerful force for school reform. In Australia, media
education began as a grassroots teacher movement and includes a strong media
arts component.
In England, the British Film Institute produces media education resources
for media teachers throughout the United Kingdom and works with a number of
teacher training centers throughout England and Scotland. Also in England,
the work of a core group of intellectuals positioned media educations as an
essential component for democratic citizenship. Len Masterman, author of
Teaching the Media, has the highest profile in the United States. His work
stresses the role of critical teaching and learning as the core of media
literacy analysis and practice. The goal of media education, according to
Masterman, is "critical autonomy" -the ability of students to practice
questioning media with their teachers until they automatically question all
information, every time they encounter it.
The work of Paul Friere influenced a similar media education movement in
South America, and media educators can be found on every continent, in both
developed and developing countries. A media education conference sponsored
by UNESCO, the French media education organization CLEMI, and the British
Film Institute in 1989 in France hosted media educators from 22 countries
from every continent. It was apparent at the UNESCO meeting that the U.S.
had a long way to go to get in step with the international media literacy
movement.
This is due in part of the fact that media is approached in the United
States from a wide, sometimes conflicting, variety of purposes that touch on
aspects of the ability to "access, analyze, evaluate and produce
communication in a variety of forms." Few programs in the U.S. approach the
ability of international media educators to integrate these four skills into
a coherent and structured whole. As media teachers begin to find common
ground and work toward a unified goal of media education for all students,
the field of media education will take on increasing importance in global
educational reform efforts.
Bridging the gap
In 1992, two events helped to bring media educators together to find common
ground and to lay the ground work for the discourse, support, and
organization necessary to bring media education to the United States. With
these events, media artist, educators and community leaders cross
disciplinary boundaries to forge a fragile synthesis of education and the
arts, opening new and challenging opportunities to bridge the gaps between
technology, education, and the arts though the analysis and production of
media. In April 1992, an unprecedented gathering of government officials,
educational policy analysis, educators and artists met in Austin, Texas for
a conference cosponsored by the Southwest Alternate Media Project (Houston).
Strategies for Media Literacy (San Francisco), and the National Alliance for
Media Arts and Culture (Oakland, California). At that conference, the group
formed the National Alliance for Media Education (NAME), a coalition of
individual and organizations with a common goal of promoting media education
in the United States ("What's in NAME's Name?" April 1993}.
NAME is in its infancy, but has already received a grant from the National
Endowment for the Arts to create a database of media educators in
partnership with the National Telemedia Council, one of the oldest media
education groups in the United States. Other NAME projects planned for 1994
include a student tape exchange and dissemination of media education
information.
In December 1992, an international group of media educators met at the Aspen
Institute Leadership Forum on Media Literacy to discuss strategies for
supporting media education in the United States. The gathering offered a
rare opportunity for those in the field to begin a discourse about the role
and purpose of media education in the United States. A position paper on
media literacy was released by the Aspen Institute in June 1993.* The media
literacy movement in the United States is currently enjoying attention from
a wide variety of sectors. Several nonprofit organizations continue to
create materials, offer support, and networking opportunities for media
teachers. Public access producers are including media education as part of
their production training, and arts institutions are looking at ways to
incorporate media education into their community outreach programs.
Individual media artists are finding their own place in the media education
movement. The hope is to get alternative works included in the school
curriculum-teaching about media, not using media as an illustration for
other subjects. Media education not only ones a new market for distributors
of independent work, it also provides what independent producers are best
at-access to different points of view, with an infrastructure for
presentation and discourse. The media artists and organizations that have
been working with young people since the 1970s and later are beginning to
find new opportunities within the educational and social systems. These are
no longer tied strictly to arts education, vocational education, or at-risk
populations, but are integrated into the fabric of our life-long learning.
Corporations are also starting to show some interest. They see a chance to
"re-purpose" their footage for media education uses, especially in the field
of multimedia production. For example, ABC Interactive ahs the opportunity
now to re-purpose news footage for interactive, edu-tainment products that
teach bout science, health, and history. In the past, most of that footage
could be literally as old as yesterday's newspapers. Now it can make money
for ABC again and again. Unaccustomed to the limelight, the challenge for
media educators is to stay the course so that media education does not
simply become this year's buzz word, only to be discarded by the next
educational fad.
CENTER>Where do we go from here?
The hope for media education lies in its ability to form coalitions and
alliances and to bridge divisions in the field. Support form the upper
echelons of the educational bureaucracy is vital, but the center will not
hold without an equal push from the grassroots that demands media education
at the local level in schools, community groups, and arts program.
Arts educators see media education at its most basic as a way to approach
audience development. Although not every media student will become a
mediamaker, all of them are audience members and citizens who can benefit
from sophisticated understanding of mass media materials. To maintain and
develop audiences for alternative media, it is the artists" job to team with
educators to articulate a compelling vision of media education in the United
States, one that provides the arena for asking the right questions and
coming up with new answers in the Age of Information.
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*Media Literacy: A Report of the National leadership Conference on Media
Literacy. By Patricia Audefheide, is available from: The Aspen Institute.
1735 Massachusetts Ave., NW, Suite 501, Washington, DC 20036. fax: (202)
986-1913.
Kathleen Tyner is founding director of Strategies for Media Literacy, a
nonprofit organization that promotes media education, and is a research
associate for rural and educational technology programs at Far West
Laboratory for Educational Research and Development. Deborah Leveranz is
artistic director of the Southwest Alternate Media Project and develops
programs in media literacy for children, parents, educators, and artists.
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