Why New Media Literacy Is Vital for Quality Journalism - 0 views
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n today’s media-saturated world, the concept of literacy is again changing. According to Pinkard, kids in school today may not be considered literate in the future if they don’t fundamentally understand new forms of media — things like blogs, Twitter and streaming video. To be truly literate, though, you also need to be able to think critically about media, discern fact from fiction, news from opinion, trusted from untrustworthy. These issues have always been thorny, but the explosion of self-publishing has only made media literacy more vital to the preservation of our democratic society.
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But that’s because journalists have a strong background in media literacy. Somewhere along the line, someone taught us the skills necessary to think critically about the information we consume, how to recognize a trusted source, and how to sniff out bias and ulterior motives.
The New Work of Assessment - Home - 0 views
Digital Campus - 0 views
Teachers' Domain: Home - 0 views
Education Week: Classroom-Tested Tech Tools Used to Boost Literacy - 0 views
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Teaching students to read in an authentic context is a key part of being literate, says Jeffrey Wilhelm, a former middle and high school teacher who is now at Boise State University, where he does research on struggling readers. “Being literate has always meant the capacity to use a culture’s most powerful tools to create and communicate meanings,” he says. “If you’re not teaching with [technology], you’re not only not preparing the kids for the future, you’re not preparing them for the present moment.”
Writing History in the Digital Age - 0 views
Technoculture | ISSN 1938-0526 - 0 views
Multimodal Literacies and Technology - 0 views
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