Friday, December 14, 2012

final DEJ


Literacy involves gaining the skills and knowledge to read, interpret, and produce certain types of texts and artifacts and to gain the intellectual tools and capacities to fully participate in one’s culture and society             ( Kellner & Share, 2005).
 Education goes so much farther than the brick school walls and I believe it is the responsibility to prepare our students for all aspects of life so that they can take active successful roles in our society.   We all want our students to be successful but how to accomplish this is the core issue.   Educators talk about 21st century skill and a global society  but in today’s standard driven and result driven educational setting , the classroom teacher must use creative ways to both meet the standards and still prepare the students for the world outside the school’s walls.   The student is made up of all facets of their life; they come to school with predetermined ideas, problems, economic differences and cultural differences.  I believe that education should celebrate these differences and give students opportunities to explore their world.  I also think that this is an area that education today falls short. 
Steven Goodman shares this view and made this observation after working with urban youth in an after-school project: One thing has struck me in my work is the odd congruence between two very different systems; the system of global media that wants young people to be spectators and consumers rather than social actors, and a factory system of schooling that wants young people to be passive and willing vessels for a prescribed set of knowledge and skills(Goodman, 2003).  I think this is a statement every teacher should read and search their own philosophy of which view they support.  I support teaching students all the skills they need to not just be vessels to absorb presented material but to question, analyze, and make a judgment of the material presented before just accepting the material.   My discipline is Family And Consumer Science and I have always shared these views.  I always wanted my students to be educated consumers and to question advertisers ads and claims but with the influx of technology and media this needs to be revamped to give the students the skills to not only view and accept the messages of media but to also question and analyze and form a personal opinion about the message-media literacy.
It is critical media literacy that will give the student these skills.  Students today are bombarded with images, audio messages, news programs, social media, internet ads, and commercials.   Media literacy gives the students’ skills to ask who, why and what is the purpose of the message.  Business pay marketing firms millions to promoted their message and without media literacy skills our students are just pawns not informed consumers.  They are not prepared to go into society informed and able to make judgments based on their own critique of the message.  Students are often much more familiar with social media, entertainment and the technologies that they use daily, than is the teacher in many cases.  I believe that a teacher can use this fact to their benefit by giving the student a voice in explaining, sharing and discussing their views, impressions and feelings within the classroom setting.  Teachers need to be prepared to defend this view because there is no pedagogy for teaching media literacy(Goodman, 2003).
Another movement that is being used to give students a voice is the use of digital stories.  I view digital stories to be a valuable tool to give students a voice.  I think the use of a familiar format such as a story is a good method to give the students a means to share who they are.  The digital story gives students a way to show who they are, their culture, their thoughts, and their world. 
While there may not be specific courses in media literacy I can see using the digital story format in a FACS class that is discussing different cultures, friendship, dating, and teen pregnancy.  Students would not only be learning about the specific social issue but also how to tell their message.  They would have to use language skills to tell their story. 
In contrast to their traditional teacher-centered classes, students consistently report that they feel more positive about themselves, their work and their community (Goodman, 2003).  I agree with this statement and find that involving the student in the process of learning the results in greater satisfaction and participation by the student.   Giving the students’ a voice in the topic, the message, the purpose of the project not only helps them to be more involved with the planning and execution but also lets them know that their opinion and views are important and respected.  This helps the student build a feeling of respect and self-esteem.  In addition to letting the student have a voice I also believe that the student should have an opportunity to try their voice outside the walls of the school in the community.  We are preparing our students to be good productive members of society after school and what better way to prepare than to practice.  When students are giving opportunities to practice in the community both the students’ and the community benefits.   Students will learn that not all they hear and learn in the community will be good but they can use the skills their media literacy skills to evaluate, analyze and critique the message and form their own opinion about the message.  This is just one example of how the media literacy skills are carried from the classroom to everyday life.
In conclusion I am excited about the development of this field.  I can see many uses for these types of skills in the FACS classroom.  I think that while core subjects are important , developing the person as a whole is also important.  Media literacy not only gives the student a way to critique media but can be used to analyze man aspects of life.  Students are taught to question, analyze research and then make a judgment all skills that are necessary to be successful. 
Work Cited
Goodman, S. (2003). Teaching youth media: A critical guide to literacy, video production & social change. NY: Teachers College Press.
Kellner, D., & Share, J. (2005). Toward critical media literacy: Core concepts, debates, organizations, and policy. Retrieved from http://pages.gseis.ucla.edu/faculty/kellner/essays/2005_Kellner-Share_TowardsCriticalMediaLiteracy.pdf

5 resource links
I love that this teacher used making a digital story to teach how to make a digital story.
Food styling and tricks to make commercials look good
examples of deconstructing media
messageshttp://www.cmch.tv/mentors_teachers/lp_nutrition.asp
Nutrition and media
how to make a digital story video.



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