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         Media Literacy Activities Teach:     more detail
  1. How to Teach Your Child to Read from Two Years: Over 125 Activities for Rapid Reading Progress by Bill Gillham, 1998-09-24

41. Interdisciplinary Resources @Web English Teacher
PBS teacher Source media literacy Interdisciplinary activities for health Twoonline biography resources and 10 ways to teach biography.
http://www.webenglishteacher.com/interdis.html
Interdisciplinary Resources Sites are organized according to disciplines involved. All projects listed here involve English/Language Arts. Art Family and Consumer Science Health Math ... Technology
Art
Common Visions, Common Voices
These lessons use art and trickster stories to help students understand that people in various cultures are more alike than different. Interpreting "Snail" by Langston Hughes
This lesson is designed for grades K-1. Students learn the sound of "sn" as they talk about snails and the poem. Additional activities for art and science are presented. The Story of Sadako and the Art of Origami
Designed for grades 4, 5, and 6, this lesson explores One Thousand Paper Cranes by studying origami, geography, math, history, and Japanese culture. Telling a Painting's Story , posted at the Smithsonian site
Students visit an art museum or use Web resources to look at works of art. They then analyze them and write about them. Wartime Posters Activity
Students investigate the impact of posters during WWII. Activities, focus questions. Requires Internet access. Video available. From Discovery.com.
Family and Consumer Science
Appliance Demonstration from AskERIC
Students present infomercials.

42. Teach More Love More - Ready To Learn
Incorporating literacy into everyday activities. Section 1 Introduction by JamieLee Curtis LeVar Burton ( 2 minutes). Low Bandwidth version Windows media (
http://www.teachmorelovemore.org/ReadyToLearn.asp
S M T W T F S
Ready To Learn
When you hold a baby lovingly and talk, sing, or read to her, the emotional closeness and language experiences you provide are an important part of preparing her to learn when she is old enough for school. There are many things parents and caregivers can do to help build a child's literacy skills from the time he is born. This video provides helpful information about:
  • The importance of communicating with your newborn. Establishing reading routines. Materials that prepare your child for reading and writing. Activities to spark your child's interest in learning. The importance of early childcare. Incorporating literacy into everyday activities.

Low Bandwidth version
Windows Media (filesize - 0.5 mb)

High Bandwidth version
Windows Media (filesize - 15.0 mb)
Section 2 - Talking with your Baby ( 54 seconds)
Low Bandwidth version
Windows Media (filesize - 0.3 mb)

High Bandwidth version
Windows Media (filesize - 6.8 mb)
Section 3 - Reading to your baby ( 1 minute 22 seconds) Low Bandwidth version Windows Media (filesize - 0.5 mb)

43. News
media Education Network presents activities and information to test their media literacyby answering particular advertisement to teach media literacy can find
http://members.tripod.com/exworthy/news.htm
News News- Adult and Kid style "publications" on the Net Online News Student Designed Newspaper- Journalism Technology Webzines ... Media Literacy and Consumer Skills S taff Dev. Lessons Links Teach Res ... Search this site!
powered by FreeFind Online News Information Newspapers in Education - This is a very long and complete list of cross curricular activities using newspapers and online newspapers. Newspapers, Magazines, and Other Media on the Web - Organized by type of publication, here are links to tons of free publications on the Web. The Christian Science Monitor- This is the online edition of the award winning publication filled with current information. Telegraph - This is a British newspaper with focus upon Britain and Ireland. BBC Online - This newspaper offers accurate and informed news about the world scene, providing photos and video clips. Asahi.com - This Japan-based publication has a reputation for hard-nosed reporting and uses innovative technology. The Age - Here is local and world news as reported by an Australian newspaper. The St. Petersburg Times-

44. Gender Equity-Media Literacy
What do ads teach both males and females about body image? Why? 1999 media LITERACYAND GENDER Women, Men. activities, Clothing, Appearance Body size Skin color.
http://www.genderequity.org/medialit/unit3_7.html
Next Lesson UNIT 3: Critical Thinking About Media And Its Impact LESSON 7: Images of Women and Men in Advertising GRADES: TIME: three 80 minute class periods plus homework SUBJECTS: English, Social Studies, Communications, Health/Life Skills DESCRIPTION: Students apply to both print and television advertisements the critical thinking and analytic skills they have been learning. In small groups, they analyze the ways in which women and men are portrayed and then discuss the impact that these portrayals have on themselves. In the TAKING ACTION! section, students can choose to create their own ads. OBJECTIVES:
Short Term
  • To learn how to analyze the images of women and men in advertising media
  • To understand ways in which advertising conveys values
  • To understand the impact of these images on self
Long Term
  • Students will more clearly understand the role media play in imparting values
  • Students will realize another way in which media affect their own self-esteem and attitudes towards gender roles
MATERIALS:
  • magazines that contain color advertisements which depict women and men in a variety of ways and which would appeal to adolescents
  • Analysis of Advertising , Worksheet #1, Unit 3, Lesson 7
  • student access to television and VCR for homework
  • VCR and television monitor in class
  • array of colored pens, crayons, or pencils; posterboard; scissors; paste or glue for "create an ad" activity

45. An Introduction To Media Literacy
media literacy Teaching Kits AdSmarts A media literacy Curriculum Produced by Kevin Watson for the Scott Newman Center in collaboration with the Center for media literacy, USA, 1993. 5 videos (contains over 3 hours of footage) strategies and postscreening questions and activities. Photographs to be
http://www.ci.appstate.edu/programs/edmedia/medialit/article.html
An Introduction to
Media Literacy:
The What, Why and How To's
For many years now, The National Telemedia Council has been asked if any clear, succinct yet comprehensive overview of media literacy was available. While Telemedium consistently addresses curriculum concerns, and textbooks like Visual Messages provide K-12 strategies and activities to integrate media literacy into the curriculum, there is need for a simple overview that explains to a newcomer to the field, just what media literacy is, and why we need it and where it belongs. These few brief pages then, represent our contribution to that need. by David Considine (Published in the Fall 1995 issue of Telemedium , The Journal of Media Literacy,
Volume 41, Number 2)
Table of Contents What is Media Literacy and why do you need it? Who teaches Media Literacy? Approaches to Media Literacy Some Principles of Media Literacy ... References and Resources What is Media Literacy and why do you need it?
First, the "why?"

46. YouthLearn: Learning
on teaching visual arts and teaching media literacy. don't replace traditional media,however They It also includes specific classroom activities for each of
http://www.youthlearn.org/learning/activities/multimedia/index.asp
Our Approach
Planning Guides

Teaching Techniques

General Info
Teaching Visual Arts

Media Literacy

Drawing
Teaching Drawing

Mirror Drawing

Graphics
Teaching Graphics
Look Who's Talking Animation Teaching Animation Make a Zoetrope Photography Teaching Digital Photography Intro Digital Camera Photo Techniques Zany Zoom Ins In Which Direction Presentations Teaching Presentations Idiom Project You Oughta Be in Pictures Build Your Own Zoo Internet Teaching the Internet Internet Looks Like Surfing Safari What's the Weather Teaching Multimedia Skills: Telling Stories in Words and Pictures Imagine the effect of having children organize and present their ideas to a room full of adults using animation, digital photography, vidoes, Web pages or other techniques we are used to seeing from professionals. In more ways than one, multimedia skills give kids a leg up in communicating their ideas. The multimedia lesson ideas available on YouthLearn include those that focus on building skills in:
  • drawing, such as the lesson

47. What Is Media Literacy
Is media literacy Taught in School? Yes, many teachers do teach media literacyskills. Can Parents teach media literacy Skills for the Internet?
http://www.websmartkids.org/literate.htm
What is Media Literacy?
Media literacy - a learned skill like reading or writing - means being able to "read" the messages communicated by TV movies and the Internet. We all need media literacy skills to help us judge the value and the truth of the messages we receive. Kids especially need these skills as they spend enormous amounts of time consuming media messages. Without guidance, kids may not realize why the message was created or how the message-maker intends to influence them. Is Media Literacy Taught in School?
Yes, many teachers do teach media literacy skills. Several states, including Texas, New Mexico and North Carolina, require media education for high school graduation. Many states' information literacy standards include media literacy: the ability to both comprehend and analyze media messages. The American Library Association has developed and posted Information Literacy Standards you can review. Sometimes media literacy skills are the goal of instruction. For example, a teacher who wants to highlight how marketing strategies target children might have students visit three or four web sites that invite kids to enter contests, then compare how these sites encourage kids to reveal the personal information marketers want.

48. CML : How To Teach Media Literacy
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/focus/tea_articles.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
10 Classroom Approaches to Media Literacy

A Brief History of Media Education

Assignment Media Literacy Maryland project

Blueprint for Response-Ability
...
WORKSHOP REPORT: Integrating Media Literacy Across the Curriculum

49. Cable In The Classroom - Thinking Critically About Media
us opportunities to socialize, teach, and inspire parents and educators, includingactivities and strategies for furthering media literacy at home
http://www.ciconline.com/Enrichment/MediaLiteracy/ThinkingCritically/
Search video and web resources: Advanced Search HOME ENRICHMENT RESOURCES ... Media Literacy Thinking Critically about Media Professional Enrichment Thinking Critically about Media
Schools and Families in Partnership The new Cable in the Classroom publication, Thinking Critically About Media: Schools and Families in Partnership makes the case for teaching media literacy at school and at home. Download the report in its entirety or by chapter. Entire Report Table of Contents Introduction Think. Interpret. Create.
How Media Education Promotes Critical Thinking, Democracy,
Health, and Aesthetic Appreciation by Robert Kubey, Ph.D. Media literacy education is at a watershed moment around the world. We are making the inevitable and gradual turn to changing what we do in classrooms and at home to make education more student-centered and responsive to children's and society's real-world needs. Empowered Parents: Role Models for Taking Charge of TV Viewing by Folami Prescott-Adams, Ph.D. Television is an amazingly powerful communication tool. Its images of culture, family, relationships, and events give us opportunities to socialize, teach, and inspire both children and adults. Empowered parents and communities are responsible for guiding the placement of television in the process of human development. Media Literacy and Prevention: Going Beyond "Just Say No" by Lynda Bergsma, Ph.D.

50. TeacherSource . Media Literacy . Related Sites | PBS
a fresh and funny look at media literacy with engaging dialogue with students, basicprinciples of media education, and classroom activities focused on
http://www.pbs.org/teachersource/media_lit/related_sites.shtm
April 9, 2003
Related PBS Sites and Programs
PBS offers several programs and Web site activities that can help you explore media issues with your students. PBS Web Sites Affluenza
http://www.pbs.org/kcts/affluenza/

Are you afflicted with "Affluenza," an unsustainable addiction to material consumption? The site offers studies, symptoms, practical ideas, and classroom resources.
American Photography: A Century of Images
http://www.pbs.org/ktca/americanphotography/

Investigate how photography shaped and recorded the 20th century. Arthur's Guide to Media Literacy
http://pbskids.org/arthur/grownups/medialiteracy/index.html

Each lesson in this guide uses a different ARTHUR episode to launch a guided discussion and classroom activities based on a media literacy theme. Culture Shock
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/cultureshock/

Is art dangerous? Understand controversial works of art in their historical context. Disconnected: Politics, the Press, and the Public http://www.pbs.org/fredfriendly/disconnected/ Examine what drives media coverage of politics and how the public can respond. Digital Divide http://www.pbs.org/digitaldivide/

51. PBL Curriculum Activities
throughout the project and as tools for media literacy. and limitations of variousmedia, and make Summaries The Technical Learning activities are tools for
http://pblmm.k12.ca.us/PBLGuide/Activities/Activities.html
Curriculum Activities Media Literacy Activities General Activities Production Activities Technical Learning Activities
Media Literacy Activity Summaries
The Media Literacy Activities ask students to critically examine and analyze the multimedia projects of others, especially those they find in the real world around them. Frequently the media literacy activities complement production activities where students work on their own multimedia projects, as in the pair Audience Influence (media literacy) and Defining Your Audience (media production). The Media Literacy Activities are intended to help students develop their own high-quality multimedia projects and use them responsibly.
Audience Influence
By defining and then inventing an audience for a media product, students learn about the ways media products are shaped by their audience.
Looking at Interviews
By examining the conscious construction of an interview in this activity, students are better able to use interviews for the purposes of their project and critically evaluate the interviews they see in other forums.
Multimedia Representations
By looking critically at the ways organizations represent themselves in various multimedia products, students will better understand the ways media are used to shape audience impressions.

52. About Media Literacy
You should teach your children when to just Be ready to offer alternative activitiesespeciallyplay with children to foster media literacy, parents should
http://www.nationaltelemediacouncil.org/aboutml.htm
ABOUT MEDIA LITERACY
Media literacy is the ability to access, analyze, evaluate and create information in a variety of print and non-print media formats. Media literacy is an expanded view of traditional literacy essential to survival in a media-filled world. It is mindful viewing and reflective judgment.
Media literacy is the "ability to choose, to understandwithin the context of content, form/style, impact, industry and productionto question, to evaluate, to create and/or produce and to respond thoughtfully to the media we consume. It is mindful reading, listening and viewing, accompanied by reflective judgment."
The following article was published in "The World & I" magazine, August 1989 From TV Idiot to Media Literate
by Robert James
I f children can learn to evaluate media, they can see how they are often duped and manipulated, instead of informed.

Sixth-grade teacher Alan Lengel realized he was getting through to his students when, in the midst of a classroom discussion about stereotypes, twelve-year-old Matt volunteered his criticism of a popular TV program. Matt disliked the way the show consistently portrayed adultsespecially parents. In his opinion, the show always made grown-ups "look stupid." "It doesn't teach you to respect your parents," he complained.
In fact, the program Matt criticizes, "You Can't Do That on Television," while intending jest, does a daily hatchet job on adults. Teachers are presented as foolish and petty bureaucrats, service workers are slovenly and rude, and parents are either feather-brained Milquetoasts or overweight, drunken slobs.

53. Ready To Learn - First Book
or caregivers, this workshop discusses media literacy and the to incorporate the programinto their literacy goals. BIG RED DOG and presents activities and fun
http://www.scetv.org/readytolearn/workshops/
SCETV provides "train-the-trainer" workshops for day care workers, kindergarten teachers, and parent educators to share the most effective way to use the READY TO LEARN programs for teaching basic concepts and skills. Workshops are targeted to one of the above groups who are expected to use their new knowledge to teach their peers to share video segments of such programs as Barney Sesame Street Arthur and Mister Roger's Neighborhood with their young students. The key to successful use of these educational programs is the workshops that teach the READY TO LEARN Triangle
  • VIEW selected programs with children DO content related hands-on activities READ a book that reinforces the program’s child development theme
  • The parent educators will then share the techniques they have learned with other parent educators as well as mothers and fathers they meet on their home visits. PROGRAM-BASED WORKSHOPS Workshops are approved for continuing education credit by the Department of Social Services. Participants will receive a certificate for the number of hours of the workshop.

    54. San Jacinto Girl Scouts
    with few books or limited literacy, other caring For exciting activities based onthe Between the Lions Policy's National Youth AntiDrug media Campaign (media
    http://www.123city.net/thegoldenlink/page7.html
    April Day Camp Issue
    Just Desserts
    Chefs make desserts from Girl Scout Cookies
    GSSJC hosted Just Desserts, a fund raiser, at the Warwick Hotel on February 6. Chefs from Houston eateries created scrumptious desserts made with Girl Scout Cookies. Guests sampled everything from peanut butter cheesecake to Thin Mint chocolate orange mousse tarts. Participating eateries included the Hotel Derek, Sam Houston Hotel, Simposio Ristorante Italian, Post Oak Grill, Rotisserie for Beef and Bird, Caramel's, Dacono's, Capital Grill, Mélange Catering, HEB, Bennie Ferrell Catering, and the Warwick Hotel. Vivian Tamayo, anchor for News 24 Houston, served as mistress of ceremonies for the event. Girl Scouts served as chef helpers and Girl Scout Eva entertained the crowd by playing the violin.
    Previous Page Back to 123CityNet TOP SJGS Home Page Next Page
    Site Designed By

    55. COURT TV ONLINE - CHOICES AND CONSEQUENCES
    teach students to analyze the content and intent Think for Yourself media Literacyfor the Millennium includes a teacher's guide and classroom activities.
    http://www.courttv.com/choices/teachers/7.html
    var openThis = 2;
    Media Smarts Today's middle schoolers are immersed in the media. They watch TV and movies, surf the Internet, use CD-Roms to research information, exchange e-mail, converse on cell phones, make tapes of favorite songs, and are rarely without a Walkman. Yet they are not very discriminating. Too often they are passive receivers and acceptingly uncritical of the myriad messages delivered t hrough all these sources. Middle school teachers have a vital role to play in teaching young adolescents to be media literate.
    Cable in the Classroom programs. Look in Cable in the Classroom magazine for information about programs, projects, and support materials, or visit CIC's Web site ( www.ciconline.org ) to do a keyword search or link to sites with downloadable lesson plans.
    • Control the remote control. Pause frequently and pose questions. "Can you predict what will happen?" "How did the characters' choices affect the outcome?" "What would you do in a similar situation?"

    56. Recommended Books
    Creating Competent Communicators activities For Teaching About Television (2002)media literacy Thinking Critically Walch Publisher media Today, Interpreting
    http://www.med.sc.edu:1081/recbooks.htm
    Recommended Books/Resources For Librarians and Media Specialists Books for Students (K-12) Picturing Lincoln: Famous Photographs That Popularized the President
    by George Sullivan Clarion Books ISBN: 0395916828 Media Wizards - Catherine Gourley, Twenty First Century Books
    ISBN 0-7613-0967-5 Caution! This May Be An Advertisement- A Teen Guide to Advertising , Kathlyn Gay,
    Franklin Watts Library Edition, ISBN 0-531-11039-7 The Berenstain Bears' MEDIA MADNESS, Random House, 0-679-86664-7 - How To Write, Direct, and Shoot Your Own Video
    Donna Guthrie, Nancy Bentley Millbrook ISBN 1-56294-688-9 - Shelagh Wallace
    Annick Press, Ltd. ISBN 1-55037-480-X
    Read about it here Ned Dowd
    Eyewitness Books-FILM Knopf ISBN 0-679-81679-8
    , W. Carter Merbreier
    Farrar, Straus and Giroux ISBN 0-374-37388-4
    read more about it, here Texts/Multimedia With Activities and Lesson Plans Scanning Television , 2nd Edition (2003), Neil Andersen, Kathleen Tyner, John J. Pungente, SJ Teaching TV Production in A Digital World: Integrating Media Literacy Libraries Unlimited, (2001), ISBN: 1-56308-726-X

    57. Media Focus
    about media rather than teach through the a more successful relationship with conventionalliteracy activities. mediamaking approaches can also provide them
    http://www.nald.ca/province/que/litcent/MEDIA2/media2.htm

    58. KIDSNET Media News: Media Literacy
    and concrete suggestions to help teach parents to NMMLP offers curriculum, classroomactivities, and other materials its new CDROM, media literacy for Health
    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

    59. Hamlet: Media Literacy
    media literacy The Many Versions of Hamlet The beginning of the play sets itstone How does each director interpret the line, We'll teach you to drink deep
    http://www.turnerlearning.com/tntlearning/hamlet/literacy.html
    Media Literacy
    The Many Versions of "Hamlet"

    The beginning of the play sets its tone, and sketches the characterizations of the principals-in particular, Hamlet himself is defined. How a director of stage or screen portrays the first few scenes will determine the course of the play. Directors of Hamlet draw upon a deep pool of prior interpretation and adaptations, handed down from generation to generation over hundreds of years. When a director like Kenneth Branagh sets out to film "Hamlet" he has several examples from which to draw; for any director shooting "Hamlet" today, Laurence Olivier's 1948 version must serve as a touchstone of interpretation.
    Show your students the first three scenes of the play; first as portrayed by Olivier, and then by Branagh. Unlike Branagh's "complete" "Hamlet," Olivier cuts the play, and reorders scenes as he sees fit; he even includes a "thesis"-"this is the story of a man who could not make up his mind." As they watch the film have your students note the obvious differences: the set; the music; the effect that the black and white versus color film stock makes.
    The second scene of the play is tripartite. We start in the official court, where Claudius attempts to put the best face on recent proceedings; then we witness Hamlet's soliloquy, where he blasts his fate; and we end with what might be considered an underground court, Hamlet's friends who know that "something is rotten in the state of Denmark."

    60. Heinemann Seeing Believing
    approach to basic theory in media literacy and the There are also activities thatclearly illustrate how strategies, smallgroup work, media production, and
    http://www.heinemann.com/shared/products/0573.asp
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    Heinemann Workshops Heinemann Speakers HeinemannU ... Seminars Special Features Resource Center Sample Chapters Exhibit Schedule Heinemann Distributors ... Help How to Teach Media Literacy in the English Classroom Ellen Krueger , Millburn High School, New Jersey,  Mary T. Christel , Adlai E. Stevenson High School, Illinois Boynton/Cook/0-86709-573-3/2001/184 pp/paperback Availability: In Stock Grade Level: 9-12 List Price: $19.50 Savings: $1.95 Online Price: $17.55 Table of contents Online resources People who bought this also bought... EMAIL this page to a friend Foreword by Alan Teasley Whether it's television, film, print, or the Internet, our world is saturated with visual images. That flow has become so persistent, so insistent, we can no longer dismiss its impact on our students' perceptions. We need to make media literacy a vital component of language arts education and equip our students to analyze and respond critically to media texts. was written to assist you with that process.

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