Understanding Media Literacy and the Challenges
Understanding ‘Media
Literacy’ and the Challenges
Friends, Do we really
trust the media,Today?
Do we believe the
news we read in the newspapers, watch on television news channels, listen to on
radio or flick through on our mobile phones more specifically Whatsapp?
Do we think the
media is full of Fake News, controlled by big vested interests who are either
spinning their version of the facts or suppressing the real story?
Modern forms of communication have made it
easier for propagandists and mischief-makers to invent fake news stories or to
create biased and incomplete versions of the truth and to pass them off as the
real thing. And that’s why media literacy has become immensely valuable at a
time when misinformation and disinformation abound.
We need media literacy to work out;
1. Who is lying to us
and who is not.
2. To distinguish
between fake news and real news.
There was a time when the means of
communicating information to a mass audience were limited to Press, radio and TV.
And those who couldn’t afford these mediums were almost left shouting on
streets to be heard.
Now the means of communication have broken
all the barriers and from street corners it has reached to everone’s palm
through 4G mobile telephony.
The most intriguing world wide web, its
fascinating social media like facebook, twitter, tinder, instagram, pinterest,
wiki, blogs and above all the most provoking whatsapp are on our first finger.
It’s hard to argue that the democratisation
of information and the power of free speech is not a good thing, but if it has
a downside it is that the liars and cheaters and deceivers have full rein to do
their thing.
You would agree with me that new things need
new skills, and so is media literacy, which is one of the foremost solutions to
the changing nature of information in our society today.
The U.S. National Association for Media Literacy Education (NAMLE)
defines media literacy as ‘the ability to access, analyze, evaluate, create,
and act using all forms of communication’.
It addresses the skills our
youth need to be taught in schools and colleges, the abilities and competencies
citizens of our great country should have as they consume information in their
homes and or work places so that they are ready to face the challenges of a
today’s communication process.
As communication technologies have
transformed the society, impacted our understanding of ourselves, our
communities, and our diverse cultures, the skillful application of literacy
skills to media and technology messages help us in correctly decoding the
message. Media literacy empowers us to be both critical thinkers and creative
producers of an increasingly wide range of messages using image, language,
and sound. Media
literacy is about having the skills to
access, understand, question, critically analyse, evaluate and create media.
Media literacy
is also about finding the untold story beneath film clips, radio spots, and
newspaper articles. Even corporate sponsored content has hidden messages that challenge
us to think beyond what we hear and see. Media
literacy has become a center of gravity for countering fake news, and a diverse
array of stakeholders – from educators to legislators, philanthropists to
technologists – have pushed significant resources toward media literacy
programs. Media literacy, however, cannot be treated as a panacea.
Those who are media literate are more aware of the way
media content is made, where it comes from and what its purpose is. They’re
more confident about voicing their opinions about media. They’re also safer
online and less likely to be manipulated by the media.
The Internet has democratized access to information but in doing so has
opened the floodgates to misinformation, fake news, and rank propaganda
masquerading as dispassionate analysis.” How does one engage online after
discovering that a once trusted space can be a site for manipulation and
disinformation?
The extent to which media literacy can combat the problematic news
environment is an open question. It is crucial to examine the promises and
limits of media literacy before embracing it as a counter to disinformation and
media manipulation. Media Literacy is the ability to read and understand
visual, aural and digital messages. It means having the skills to understand
and interact with the media analytically, critically and knowledgeably.
Media literacy emphasizes the following elements:
a.
a critical thinking skill that
allows audiences to develop independent judgments about media
content;
b.
an understanding of the process of mass
communication;
c.
an awareness of the impact of media on
the individual and society;
d.
the development of strategies with which to
discuss and analyze media messages;
e.
an awareness of media content as ‘text’ that
provides insight into our contemporary culture and ourselves;
f. . the cultivation of an enhanced enjoyment, understanding
and appreciation of media content;
Media literacy focuses on individual responsibility for discerning the
truth or accuracy of messages. As platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, and
Whatsapp increasingly personalize information access, individual responsibility
becomes more challenging, especially when methods for serving information are
not transparent.
One great challenge is how an individual can assess the reliability of
information when the breadth of the corpus, e.g., what is included and excluded
and why, (and how it differs from information served to others) is neither
visible nor accessible. It is necessary to re-think media literacy in the age of platforms.
Future of Media Literacy, the current political and media environment is one of
high stakes for media literacy efforts.
Globally media literacy is caught in a vicious circle; only the
development of a systematic and cumulative body of research regarding the
teaching and learning of media literacy can help clarify goals, define clear
policies, identify effective teaching practices and teacher education and
explain the educational process that pupils undergo when they study media, and
to create such a body of research requires a sophisticated media literacy
program which should focus on the following;
a. develop a coherent understanding of the media environment,
b. improve cross-disciplinary collaboration,
c. leverage the current media crisis to consolidate stakeholders,
d. prioritize the creation of a national media literacy evidence base, and
e. develop curriculam for addressing action in addition to
interpretation.
Some questions need answers….
1. Can media literacy be successful in preparing citizens to deal with
fake news and information?
2. Which groups should be targeted for media literacy interventions?
3. Who would most benefit from training, and where have efforts been
shown to be most effective?
4. Given the traditional use of age as a method of classification –
different curriculam for youth and adults – is there value in using other
criteria, such as occupation?
5. How can media literacy programs effectively address overconfidence in
skills? This can manifest pre-emptively (individuals who feel they need no
media literacy training) and reactively (individuals who overestimate the
effectiveness of their media literacy training).
6. Are traditional media literacy practices (e.g., verification and
fact-checking) impractical in everyday media consumption?
7. How can media literacy initiatives respond to the powerful systems of
media il-literacy (e.g., clickbait, feed algorithms) which already condition
individuals’ media behaviors?
8. How are groups committed to disinformation and propaganda able to
harness the language of literacy and critical analysis to sow new distrust of
media and establish adversarial political spaces?
9. What is the political identity of media literacy in during a
hyper-partisan moment?
10. How will the overlapping efforts of media literacy stakeholders
interact?
11. Will new signals for trustworthiness aimed at limiting ‘fake news’
backfire, producing new uncertainty around media messages?
The field of media literacy can capitalize on the ways in which the
crisis of fake news has brought renewed focus to the field. There is an opportunity to build greater
coherence within the field as well as be a driving force for multi-sectoral,
cross disciplinary collaboration.
This is a time for identifying what is known and unknown about the
field, and where the gaps lie. It is also the time to develop a rigorous
evidence base to show the efficacy of media literacy education in preparing our
youth for the changing media environments. A robust evidence base is needed to
demonstrate the value of media literacy education and to attract future
resources and support from related sectors i.e. media owners and the Govt.
It would be a breach of our duties as teachers for
us to ignore the rhetorical power of visual forms of media in combination with
text and sound…the critical media literacy we need to teach must include
evaluation of these media, lest our students fail to see, understand, and learn
to harness the persuasive power of visual media.
Thanks
Very well written .
ReplyDeleteAn absolutely delightful read!!!
ReplyDelete