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81. Reading Online - New Literacies: New Literacies In Action - Bad Ad
may be of interest to literacy educators, including a “Just Do media literacy”film, an “Understanding media” CDROM, and an activities guide; a K
http://www.readingonline.org/newliteracies/action/williams/
New Literacies in Action This month, New Literacies in Action Ann Watts Pailliotet
Department Editor
Students Deconstructing Advertising:
What Makes a Bad Ad?
Rob Williams

New Mexico Media Literacy Project
Albuquerque, New Mexico
United States
I write as a history and media analysis teacher with 10 years of experience in public and private middle and high schools. Currently, I teach a media analysis elective and an Advanced Placement U.S. history course at Albuquerque Academy, an independent school serving a diverse population of 1,000 students aged 11 to 18. I also am the director of curriculum for the New Mexico Media Literacy Project Rationale. Two years ago, in conjunction with California Newsreel and Consumer Reports' Zillions magazine, NMMLP started the BadAd essay contest Goals. The goals of the BadAd contest include
  • sharpening their media literacy skills (particularly their powers of observation andwriting);
  • linking their writing to a critical activist spirit;
  • having fun in the process.
Contest rules. We encourage you to conduct a similar activity with your students or, better yet, have them send in entries for BadAd 2001. (The submission deadline will be

82. CML : Best Practices
The Center for media literacy provides you with a wide selection of teaching tools, carefully evaluated for their quality and importance to the field.
http://www.medialit.org/best_practices.html
Media Issues / Topics - Advertising / Consumerism - Computer Literacy / Digital Revolution - Faith-Based Media Literacy - Film Study / Movie-making - Global Media Issues - Health Issues - History of Media - How to Teach Media Literacy - Media Activity Resources - Media Advocacy / Activism - Media Industry / Economics - Music / Music Videos - Production / Creating Media - Student Made Media - TV and Popular Culture - Violence in the Media - Visual Literacy Curriculum / Subject Area - Art / Media Arts - English / Language Arts - Ethics / Character Education - Health / Prevention - Life Skills - Science / Math - Social Studies - Spirituality / Religion
"When the question: 'What's new?' is pursued at the expense of all other questions, what follows in its wake is often an endless flood of trivia and fashion. I wish to be concerned with the question: 'What is best?' for this question cuts deeply, rather than broadly sweeping over everything." Robert Pirsig, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance Best Practices encompasses the best of media literacy education - the instructional tools and techniques that teachers use to organize their classes, create engaging activities and accomplish their learning objectives. Explore this section to learn more about the exploding field of media literacy education and how to incorporate it in teaching, in learning and in life.

83. Teacher Role Of Library Media Specialist
guidelines for planning technologybased activities in which and Tools for InformationLiteracy Instruction Use developed by BCPS library media specialists to
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.

84. Media Literacy
be reduced to a genteel policing activity, where little in the concept of literacy,and in identifying aspects of multimodal communication and media literacy.
http://www.okb.de/doku/englisch/media-literacy.htm
DEMOCRACY AND MEDIA LITERACY A Presentation by Robert Ferguson
Course Leader
MA Media, Culture and Communication Programme
University of London Institute of Education
July 2002
It is time for any of us who were tempted to think that way to do some serious rethinking. "Man's capacity for justice makes democracy possible, but man's inclination to injustice makes democracy necessary." Reinhold Niebuhr "Democracy encourages the majority to decide things about which the majority is blissfully ignorant." John Simon "If you want to understand democracy, spend less time in the library with Plato and more time on the buses with people." Simeon Strunskey "If voting changed anything, they'd abolish it." Anonymous " "Smart-assed quotations about democracy are cheap and easy. The practice of democracy is expensive, hard, and requires the process of education." Robert Ferguson

85. Totse.com | Media Literacy: How The Media Constructs Reality
media literacy Resource Guide Intermediate and Senior Divisions MORE Raw media. Rankof television watching as the most popular afterschool activity among 6 to
http://www.totse.com/en/media/the_media_industrial_complex/medialit.html
About Community Bad Ideas Drugs ... ABOUT
Media Literacy: How the Media Constructs Reality
by Media Literacy Resource Guide
KEY CONCEPTS
1. All media are CONSTRUCTIONS. 2. All media construct REALITY. 3. AUDIENCES negotiate meaning in media. 4. Media have COMMERCIAL implications. 5. Media contain IDEOLOGICAL and VALUE messages. 6. Media have SOCIAL and POLITICAL implications. 7. Media have UNIQUE AESTHETIC FORM that is closely related to CONTENT. Reprinted from Media Literacy Resource Guide: Intermediate and Senior Division. Toronto: Ontario Ministry of Education, 1989.
Key Concepts of Media Literacy Explained
1. Media are mediated communication. They are not "slices of life," "windows on the world," or "mirrors of society." They are carefully manufactured constructs with nothing left to chance. They are not, by definition, "real," although they attempt to imitate reality. The success of these manufactured constructs lies in their apparent naturalness. Our job as media educators is to make media "strange" and problematic to students. 2. Although media are not real, they can shape our attitudes, behavior and ideas about the world. The WWII broadcaster, Walter Lippman called it "the world outside and the pictures in our heads." If we haven't had first-hand experience with a person, place or thing and yet we feel we know something about it based on media information, then media has constructed a form of reality for us. Our job as media educators is to question media culture and to teach our students to think about reality vs. mediated information.

86. Information Literacy Annotated Bibliography
rich and varied web resources that help integrate information literacy activitiesand skills media specialists Leading the way to information literacy.
http://www.sabine.k12.la.us/sleitz/information_literacy_bib.htm
Florien High School Library
Florien, Louisiana
Suzanne Leitz
, Library Media Specialist Information Literacy
Annotated Bibliography Journal Articles Web-based Resources Multi-media ERIC Documents BOOKS Anderson, M. A. (1996). Teaching information literacy using electronic resources for grades 6-12 . Worthington, OH: Linworth.
This book is a compilation of 53 lesson plans for grades 6-12. Lessons include CD-ROM databases, exploring the Internet, electronic encyclopedia, creating a computer slide show, desktop publishing, and on-line catalog searching. Bleakley, A. (1994). Resource-based learning activities: information literacy for high school students. Chicago: American Library Association. This book includes guidelines for both teachers and students. Ercegovac, Z. (2001). high school students. Worthington, OH: Linworth. Useful for teachers, librarians, or students, this book helps students become competent learners by learning how to plan research, organize preparation for research, find a variety of resources, think critically about resources, and give credit appropriately. Langhorne, M. J. (Ed.). (1998).

87. LION: Lesson Plans & Teaching Activities For School Librarians
approach, with specific goals and activities for students book Library Skills to InformationLiteracy A Handbook meaning that the library/media specialist and
http://www.libraries.phila.k12.pa.us/lion/lessons.html
Librarians Information Online Network
Provided here are lessons and activities useful in school libraries, links to library and information skills curriculum documents, and related books and periodicals.
American Association of School Librarians: Position Statement on Information Literacy and Problem-Solving
Outlines the role of the library media program in fostering information literacy, and includes eight "scenarios" that illustrate how cooperative instructional efforts between teachers and library media specialists can help students improve their information problem-solving skills through significant learning experiences.
Baltimore County Public Schools: Library Lesson Plan Format
A form used by Baltimore library media specialists to plan lessons.
Bellingham Public Schools: Staff Development Course on Information Literacy
This Washington State school district provides online some of the materials it uses in a staff development course on Information Literacy and the Net . The course emphasizes student investigations as vehicles to explore information available on the Internet. Topics covered include the Research Cycle, several types of literacy, Gardner's Seven Intelligences, and much more.
Bellingham Public Schools: Library Media Frameworks
This Washington State school district provides information on its library media curriculum. Includes elementary and secondary "scenarios" illustrating the role of the library media center in student projects.

88. SBC Knowledge Network Explorer : Online Learning : Blue Web'n Search Results
fully in the 21st century media culture. organize their classes, create engaging activitiesand accomplish LEARN Information literacy Initiative http//www.tafe
http://www.kn.pacbell.com/wired/bluewebn/contentarea.cfm?cid=3&scid=112

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