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41. National Urban Alliance - NUA - Media Links
development and share best practices for teaching media literacy. media literacy activities at this site for ProjectBased Learning with Multimedia
http://www.nuatc.org/resources/weblinks/media_lit.html
projects articles resources people about nua ... contact
This page has links to many sites related to media literacy. If you have any corrections or additional information please email NUA Weblinks
Media Literacy
ADBUSTERS

http://www.adbusters.org/

Based in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, Adbusters is a not-for-profit, reader-supported, 85,000-circulation magazine concerned about the erosion of our physical and cultural environments by commercial forces. Our work has been embraced by organizations like Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace, has been featured on MTV and PBS, in the Wall Street Journal and Wired, and in hundreds of other newspapers, magazines, and television and radio shows.
ADFLIP
http://www.adflip.com/

adflip.com is the world's largest searchable database of classic print ads. You can search by category, by decade, even by year.
CENTER FOR MEDIA LITERACY
http://www.medialit.org
An authoritative resource for parents, teachers, and children, CML offers comprehensive programs and services in the media literacy field. The Reading Room houses dozens of full text articles and news items on topics ranging from violence in the media and computer literacy, to strategies for media education and production. Additional articles, toolkits, and lesson plans as well as training opportunities provide professional development and share best practices for teaching media literacy. THE CHALLENGE 2000 MULTIMEDIA PROJECT http://pblmm.k12.ca.us/PBLGuide/Activities/Activities.html

42. KIDSNET Media News: Media Literacy
AME provides support and training for media literacy education activities in schools, The Center for media literacy (CML) is a nonprofit membership
http://www.kidsnet.org/medianews/literacy/literacy.html
KIDSNET MEDIA NEWS: Media Literacy AAP Statement Of Policy On Media Education
The American Academy of Pediatrics has issued an official statement of policy on the importance of media education. The policy includes brief statements on the amount of time spent with the media; the impact of media violence on aggressive behavior; sexual content in the media; tobacco and alcohol; effects of media on obesity and school performance; and the value of media education. The abstract for the statement is given below; the full text may be read at the AAP's website.
Abstract: The American Academy of Pediatrics recognizes that exposure to mass media (i.e., television, movies, video and computer games, the Internet, music lyrics and videos, newspapers, magazines, books, advertising, etc) presents both health risks and benefits for children and adolescents. Media education has the potential to reduce the harmful effects of media. By understanding and supporting media education, pediatricians can play an important role in reducing the risk of exposure to mass media for children and adolescents.
Also see www.aap.org/family/mediaimpact.htm for a more detailed brochure, "Understanding the Impact of Media on Children and Teens," which includes recommendations for media education at the family level

43. Media Literacy
Then, brainstorm activities that would help address this area. What resourcescould be used to Canada has a long tradition of teaching media literacy.
http://eduscapes.com/seeds/literacy.html
Media Literacy Bring up the term "media literacy" with a group of people and a dozen different ideas come to mind. Some people will think of "film studies courses" where students analyze characters, plot, and cinematography. While others start complaining about the quality of television. Still others will recall a middle school class where they learned about advertising techniques that TV commercials use. This page focuses on media literacy. For information on the larger issue of information literacy, go to Approaches to Information and Communication Literacy at eduScapes Teacher Tap . For related information about visual literacy, read Visual Literacy by Annette Lamb at eduScapes Activate and The On-Line Visual Literacy Project from Pomona College Media Literacy Defined Media literacy is the ability to read, interpret, use, design, and create audio and video materials for specific outcomes. This includes thinking, learning, and expressing oneself using media. Since media is all around us, some people may think that everyone is naturally media literacy. Young people are typically large consumers of all types of media including Internet, television, radio, movies, and computers. Of course anyone can become a couch potato and view television and music as a passive medium. Media literate people view their interaction with media as active.

44. MediaFamily.org | Links: Media Education And Media Literacy Resources
classroom activities and teaching tips to help prevent students from using drugs . It also teaches parents about media literacy and how to help their
http://www.mediafamily.org/links/index.shtml
Get Media Wise : Watch what your kids watch Home Donate Store Contact Us ...
Email This Page
Links c o n t e n t s Take Action! Donate Speakers/Training MediaWise Columns ... About Us
Media Education and Media Literacy Resources
The goal of the National Institute on Media and the Family (Institute) is to provide resources for educators, parents, community leaders, and others concerned about the ever increasing impact of media on children, families, and communities. The following is a list of other organizations concerned with media education and media literacy issues. Continue to check our web site for new sites and resources. The resources listed are organizations separate from the Institute. The Institute does not endorse nor does it assume liability for the currency, accuracy, or availability of any information on these sites. Please inform our webmaster if you locate any links that have moved, are no longer operational, or should be reviewed and added to the resources list. Thank you.

45. Time Warner Cable
Critical Viewing Project, teaching media literacy skills to parents, Parents, consider doing these media literacy activities with your kids to help
http://www.timewarnercable.com/sanantonio/programming/parentalcontrols/medialite
var MarketID=55; var city = GetCookie("City"); document.write( TrimString(city, 19) + ' ' + GetCookie("Zip") ); [change my location] SEARCH:  Programming Channel Lineups TV Listings Movies On Demand Pay-Per-View Events ... TV Ratings
Many Americans get most of their information from television yet, until recently, children have not been taught how to use television, the Internet and other electronic media. A growing number of educators, academics and media professionals are calling for media literacy to be taught in schools and elements of this subject are now part of the curricular frameworks in 48 states. Media literacy is the ability to access, understand, analyze, evaluate and create media messages on television, the Internet and other technologies. It can help us interpret the many messages we receive each day from these sources. In essence, the media literate individual applies the same thinking skills used in reading and writing to other forms of media. Media literacy is known by a variety of names. Some people call it media education. Others, when specifically referring to television, use the term "critical viewing." Cable in the Classroom has partnered with the National PTA and the National Cable Television Association in The Family and Community Critical Viewing Project, teaching media literacy skills to parents, teachers and community members through free workshops, videos and booklets.

46. 2001  The Role Of Writing In Teaching Media Literacy And Popular Culture In The
Teaching literacy from and with Popular Culture, Teacher Librarian, June 2001,285 Improving Reading Comprehension by Using media literacy activities
http://medialit.med.sc.edu/articles2001.htm

The Role of Writing in Teaching Media Literacy and Popular Culture in the Secondary School

The Writing Instructor, December 18, 2001
Defining New Literacies in Curricular Practice,
Reading Online, November 2001
http://www.readingonline.org/newliteracies/semali1/index.html
Yes, Media Literacy Fits in Math and Science, ENC FOCUS, ( Volume 8, No. 3) pg 48-49
http://www.enc.org/focus/literacy/documents/0,1948,FOC-002081-index,00.shtm

Teaching Literacy from and with Popular Culture , Teacher Librarian, June 2001, 28:5
Improving Reading Comprehension by Using Media Literacy Activities ( Voices From The Middle, NCTE)
Volume 8 No. 4, May 2001
Reading, 'Riting, Reacting
, Education Week, May 16,2001
Applying Diffusion Theory: Adoption of Media Literacy Programs in Schools,
May 2001 Image Education and Media Literacy (April 2001) Technology and Media Literacy: What Do Teachers Need to Know? April 2001) Focus on Media Literacy Classroom Notes Plus, (NCTE) April 2001 Negotiating Critical Literacies , School Talk (NCTE) April 2001, Vol.6 No. 3 Classroom Strategies for Exploring Realism and Authenticity in Media Messages Reading Online-April 2001 http://www.readingonline.org/newliteracies/lit_index.asp?HREF=/newliteracies/hobbs/index.html

47. Do You Have Any Information About Teaching Media Literacy?
TI Improving Reading Comprehension by Using media literacy activities. Relates it to critical media literacy. Offers rationales for teaching critical
http://www.eduref.org/Virtual/Qa/archives/Subjects/Information_Literacy/Media_Li
Media Literacy
An AskERIC Response
January 2003
Question
Do you have any information about teaching media literacy?
Response
Hello, In response to your request for information on on teaching media literacy, we conducted a sample search of the ERIC database. Below we have appended our search strategy, 13 citations with abstracts, and directions for accessing the full text. These citations may represent an introductory, rather than exhaustive, search for information on your topic. If you would like to conduct your own free ERIC database searches via the Internet, please visit the ERIC Database Help pages for directions or go directly to http://www.eduref.org/Eric/adv_search.shtml to search. I have also attached some related resources that may be helpful. Thank you for using AskERIC! If you have any questions or would like further assistance, please do not hesitate to send another message. AskERIC Staff Internet Sites: * The Seven Great Debates in the Media Literacy Movement
Noting the differing ideologies among the diverse community of media educators, organizers and activists, Renee Hobbs calls for all of us in media literacy to "cast our ballot" on these debates to help build a movement in which all points of view are heard, respected and accommodated.

48. TeacherSource . Media Literacy . Related Studies | PBS
Public Education Commercial activities in Schools One of the largesteducational Web sites for media literacy in North America, with a large inventory
http://www.pbs.org/teachersource/media_lit/related_study.shtm
search options
Friday, September 23, 2005
Directory of Related Sites and Studies Want to learn more about what's happening in the field of K-12 media education? Check out these sites and studies: Advertising and Marketing (General)
Commercialism in Schools

Gender and Sex in the Media

Media Consumption
...
Web and Video Games

Advertising and Marketing (General) About-Face
http://www.about-face.org/

Investigate stereotypes of women in advertising through galleries of print ads, statistics, and activism campaigns. Note: Be sure to preview gallery content before classroom use. Ad Age Fact Pack 2004 Edition
http://www.adage.com/news.cms?newsId=39766
This quick-reference synopsis of the year’s marketing and advertising data shows who spends the most on advertising, how much is spent on advertising across various media, and much more. Advertisement Avenue http://www.advertisementave.com/ This free archive of television commercials provides an abundant source of content for advertising analysis. Commercial Alert http://commercialalert.org/

49. Media Literacy
group activities as well as from creating and producing one s own media media literacy involves teaching the skills that will empower citizens and
http://www.21stcenturyschools.com/Media_Literacy_Defined.htm
Media Literacy
Media literacy empowers people to be both critical thinkers and creative producers of an increasingly wide range of messages using image, language, and sound. It is the skillful application of literacy skills to media and technology messages. As communication technologies transform society, they impact our understanding of ourselves, our communities, and our diverse cultures, making media literacy an essential life skill for the 21st century. (From the AMLA web site - Alliance for a Media Literate America) Click links below to additional information on Media Literacies!
Current Projects in Media Literacy
Critical Media Literacy in Times of War, Dr. Megan Boler, Director of Women's Studies at Virginia Tech
Media Literacy Defined
Articles Online ...
The Language of Media Literacy - a Glossary of Terms , by Derek Boles
Schools and Programs
Sample Media Literacy Projects
Resources for Media Literacy
Media Links
Definitions of Media Literacy Media Literacy teaches analysis, access and production of media. Media consist of "mediums" such as books, newspapers, billboards, magazines, comics, mail, packaging, jokes, radio, television, movies, software and the Internet.

50. MediaLiteracy.com Teaching Social Studies History
New Mexico media literacy Project CDROM teaching resources, study guides and PBS Teacher Source has a huge collection of lesson plans and activities.
http://www1.medialiteracy.com/teaching_social.jsp

51. Holcomb Hathaway, Publishers: Literacy And Learning In The Content Areas
Endof-chapter Getting Ready to teach activities help students apply what they’ve Chapter 1 literacy, Content Area teaching, and Learning Standards
http://hh-pub.com/book.php3?book=HH1370

52. Rocky Mountain PBS: Education
activities include. media literacy Workshops uses a humorous approach toteaching media literacy concepts and critical thinking skills to students in
http://www.rmpbs.org/education/medialit.html
TV SCHEDULE PROGRAMS EVENTS EDUCATION ... SUPPORT
Features TutorLine TeacherLine Online Courses School Membership ... PBS TeacherSource
Media Literacy
TV Confidential

A program for 7th-9th grade students and their teachers and parents.
TV Planet

A program for 3rd-6th grade students and their teachers and parents. An increasingly important topic for students in the new millennium, media literacy means the ability to critically view what one sees in all forms of media. From television shows to the Internet, the media influence the way we view our world.
Television in particular, in 99 percent of homes in the United States, plays a huge part in defining our values and beliefs as a society. Learning to be a critical viewer is thus imperative or we run the risk of allowing the business behind television to create our values.
Rather than censoring all television, proponents of media literacy encourage us to equip students with the critical thinking skills needed to best understand the messages received on television. Media literacy empowers viewers to examine their relationship with the media and better understand the business behind television, allowing them to make their own determinations of their values within the context of this new knowledge.

53. Media Literacy: Thinking Critically About Visual Culture - CML Product
1548 media literacy Thinking Critically About the Internet 1527 What VideoGames Have to teach Us About Learning literacy 1467 Photolanguage
http://gpn.unl.edu/cml/cml_product.asp?catalog_name=GPN&product_id=1555

54. Media Literacy Resource Guide - CML Product
The “roadmap” for teaching media literacy in Canada; Available exclusively in the US activities and approaches for teaching the following media genres
http://gpn.unl.edu/cml/cml_redirect.asp?catalog_name=GPN&product_id=1156

55. Media-Savvy Kids
The answer We teach media literacy, which trains children to think criticallyabout both the overt To her, this activity is a media literacy lesson.
http://teacher.scholastic.com/products/instructor/Nov04_mediasavvy.htm
Scholastic Home About Us Site Map Search ... Product Information
Media-Savvy Kids
By Meg Lundstrom

5 Media-Savvy Questions That Kids Should Ask
Media Literacy Resources We are deluged every day by a steady stream of noise and images. Children seem especially vulnerable to the pace, the pitches, and the pounding sounds as media defines what is fun, relevant, and important.
According to research, elementary-age children spend an average of four and a half hours a day in front of a television screen, computer monitor, or video game. But schools may not be helping young viewers handle what they're seeing and hearing.
Policymakers agree. Today, all 50 states mandate some form of media literacy as part of their educational framework. Seven states, including Texas and Maryland, have made it a separate strand in their standards. But in many states, teachers are finding little guidance for helping their kids become media-savvy. Teaching to statewide testing standards often leaves little time to create independent media literacy units. In recent years, the growing trend is to teach media literacy not as a subject in itself, but as a way to approach the entire curriculum.
Engaging the Disengaged Students trained in media literacy spend less time watching TV and playing video games, according to studies by the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. They may also become less aggressive and more skeptical of smoking and liquor ads. And being media savvy even leads to improved reading and listening comprehension scores on standardized tests. Furthermore, teachers report that media literacy often pulls in marginal students who are otherwise disengaged. It puts students from both print-literate and non-print-literate households on more equal footing, helps students learn collaborative skills, and raises kids' excitement level.

56. MediaWatch
media literacy is the ability to read and analyze media images and inherent Five Important Ideas to teach Your Kids About TV, media and Values, 1991.
http://www.mediawatch.ca/medialiteracy.html
Media Literacy adjust font
Media Literacy is the ability to read and analyze media images and inherent messages in all media products. Being media literate is the first step to understanding media and to becoming an active media consumer. Be in charge of your media consumption! Be media literate!
Media Literacy Tools for Parents

Gender Issues in the Media

Speaking Tips

Media Skills
...
Issues

Media Literacy Tools for Parents Image of Women in the Media - Media Literacy for Young Children Media messages help to define what is normal, acceptable and ideal, and most children spend more time interacting with media than they do in school. Young children are especially vulnerable to the teachings of media because they don't have the critical capacity necessary to distinguish between fantasy and reality, to identify persuasive intent, or to understand irony and disregard stereotypes. The cumulative and unconscious impact of these media messages can contribute to limiting the development of a child's potential. Much of children's knowledge about and experience of the world is indirect, having come to them through the media. Media are not "transparent" technologies; they do not offer a "window on the world". In mediating events and issues, television, film, video games and other media are involved in selecting, constructing and re-presenting reality. In so doing, the media tend to emphasize and reinforce the values and images of those who create the messages and own the means of dissemination. In addition, these values and images are often influenced by commercial considerations. As a result, the viewpoints and experiences of other people are often left out, or shown in negative ways.

57. TWI, Renee Hobbs On Media Literacy In World Lit
Improving Reading Comprehension by Using media literacy activities. literacy in a Digital World Teaching and Learning in the Age of Information.
http://www.writinginstructor.com/areas/englished/hobbs.html

58. Teacher Role Of Library Media Specialist
Committed to promoting media literacy education that is focused on critical inquiry, Lesson Plans and Teaching activities for School Librarians
http://www.bcps.org/offices/lis/office/teacher.html
Contents This Page
BCPL Assignment Alert

BCPL QUEST

Best Practices

Cohort
...
Problem Solving Models

- Online Research
- WebQuests
- I-Question
- CyberGuides
- I-Search Reading Page Research Scope and Sequence Technology Integration The MSDE Standards for School Library Media Programs provide the guiding principles for program development and evaluation in the Baltimore County Public Schools. A merican A ssociation of S chool L ibrarians Position Statements Information Literacy Resource Based Inst Independent Reading and others Resource Guides These web-based guides comprise a working bibliography of resources gathered by AASL staff to assist library media staff with all aspects of library programming. Cool Tool Try N oodle B ib when you want to create a MLA Works Cited list.

59. Media Literacy
K12 curriculum to teach media literacy with integrated units. Math activitiesthat are cross-curricular connecting music, film theater, print media
http://www.edselect.com/media.htm

60. Linworth Publishing
media literacy activities for Understanding the Scripted World Teaching andTesting Information literacy Skills will help library media specialists
http://www.linworth.com/search_list.cfm?type=6

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