Produktbild: Media Literacies

Media Literacies A Critical Introduction

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

20.01.2012

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons

Seitenzahl

246

Maße (L/B/H)

22,9/15,2/1,3 cm

Gewicht

313 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-4051-8610-0

Beschreibung

Rezension

"That being the case, the authors' primaryrecommendation is for media literacy to assume an increased role inschool curricula worldwide. As Hoechsmann and Poyntz demonstrate,media practice is sufficiently academic and promotes criticalcitizenship, agency and empowerment - qualities that allteachers are sure to agree are highly laudable educationaloutcomes." ( Pedagogies: An InternationalJournal , 24 May 2012)

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

20.01.2012

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons

Seitenzahl

246

Maße (L/B/H)

22,9/15,2/1,3 cm

Gewicht

313 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-4051-8610-0

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  • Produktbild: Media Literacies
  • Preface ix

    1 What is Media Literacy? 1

    Media Literacy 2.000 4

    Natives and Aliens 7

    Media Education has a History to Draw On 9

    Media Education in the Twenty-First Century 12

    2 Children's Media Lives 17

    Researching Young People in Mediated Environments 19

    Getting Older Faster, Staying Younger Longer 20

    Life Inside a Media Wonderland 23

    Inequities and Parents' Worries about Media Use 25

    Media Concentration and the Big Four 28

    Creating Cradle-to-Grave Consumers 30

    Conclusion 33

    3 Media as Public Pedagogy 35

    Media as Threat 37

    Media as a Form of Public Pedagogy 39

    New Learning Horizons 41

    Debating Dangerous Screens 43

    The Merits of Television for Education 46

    Children's Learning Television 48

    SIDEBAR: An Inconvenient Truth as public pedagogy 50

    Public Service Announcements, Entertainment Education, and Culture Jamming 53

    Bricolage 58

    SIDEBAR: Pre-teen girls and popular music 60

    4 Media Literacy 101 63

    A Demand for New Heuristics 65

    Cultural Life 67

    Production 68

    SIDEBAR: Moral makeovers: Reality television and the good citizen 69

    Text 76

    Audience 84

    SIDEBAR: Children's media encounters in contemporary India: Leisure and learning 88

    Cultural Life 92

    SIDEBAR: The Simpsons: Not such a dumb show after all! 95

    5 Media Production and Youth Agency 100

    What Creative Work Adds to Media Education: Production as Praxis 101

    SIDEBAR: Youth cultural production and creative economies 102

    SIDEBAR: Assessing learning from practical media production at an introductory level: The role of writing 106

    What does Production Mean? 110

    How is Production a Form of Agency? 112

    SIDEBAR: Youth as knowledge producers in community-based video in the age of AIDS 119

    SIDEBAR: Youth Radio 126

    6 Literacies: New and Digital 137

    What does it Mean to be 'Literate' Today? 137

    Expanded Literacies 139

    New Literacies and New Ways of Thinking and Doing 141

    Digital Literacies and 'Top-Down' Approaches 144

    The Role of Learning Environments in Relation to Digital Literacies 146

    7 Media Literacy 2.0: Contemporary Media Practices and Expanded Literacies 151

    Media Literacy 2.0: The Seven Cs of Contemporary Youth Media Practices 153

    SIDEBAR: Learning in Second Life 156

    SIDEBAR: Immersive advertising and children's game spaces 164

    SIDEBAR: Rethinking media literacy through video game play 175

    SIDEBAR: Understanding remix and digital mashup 180

    SIDEBAR: YAHAnet: Youth, the Arts, HIV and AIDS network 184

    Conclusion 190

    8 Critical Citizenship and Media Literacy Futures 191

    Thinking, Judging, and Critical Citizenship 195

    Last Words 200

    References 203

    Index 217