| last updated
      11/3/2014 
        Media / News
        Literacy Program
        Assignment 
		  
		Your 
		final team project involves developing a program on media or news
        "literacy" for college freshmen, such as ILA students or
        advanced high school students and/or the general public.  The program should include a
        media artifact that presents of important material that these "users" of 
		your program can understand in ways that will help them become better 
		and more critically thoughtful consumers of media and news information.  
		Your program will take the form of a "stand-alone" PowerPoint slide show 
		or a Prezi (with or without a sound-track). 
		  GOAL: 
      This assignment requires your team to identify a narrowly defined set of 
	  concepts about news or other another form of digital information that 
	  users of your program can see applied to media they encounter in their 
	  lives.  The "program" you create should explain the knowledgeyou have 
	  defined and show in a concrete way how that knowledge can be applied to a 
	  real-world mediated message.  By completing your "program" the user 
	  should be able to use that knowledge in responding and making use of news 
	  and media he or she encounters in daily life. Thus, your team must design a short program 
	  for the users that  
        
          introduces
          your selected topic and shows how it is relevant and important to the
          students you are training.
          provides
          a concrete example of an interesting and, perhaps, vivid media/news 
		  message that the users can view.
          and
          engages the users with the material through explanations that show the 
		  application of the concepts you have defined to the message in ways 
		  that will allow users to apply the same concepts to other media/news 
		  messages they encounter in the future so that they will be sure to have a
          signficant "take-away" from your program. Structure
      of the Program:  The typical program 
      will need to  include the following  elements. 
        
          An
          introduction to your topic that gets attention,
          sets a context for your program and establishes
		  why this
          material is important to the users you are presenting it
          for.  [ A-M-T-O of the AMTOBUL model you studied in COMM 101 may 
		  be useful in thinking about this portion of the program.]
          
		  A
          "meaty" set of following "slides" that lay out the
          key ideas your team has decided to include.  ("Meaty"
          in this case means that the slides should contain enough information 
		  so
          that the slide show alone could be understood by 
		  ANY person who views
          it, not just members of this class.)  The slide show presentation by your team could  involve discussion and interaction with the students
          being trained as you go through it in some settings but should also be 
		  understandable to individuals who only see the slide show and view the 
		  media/news message.
          
		  A link to an actual news story (or other 
		  appropriate media information source, an "artifact")  so that 
		  users can view the concepts your slides introduce in an actual news or 
		  media message.
          
		  A set of "applications" 
		  (explanations of how the concepts introduced in B. above apply to the 
		  linked message) that reveal to the user how your concepts can be 
		  applied in real life.  The best programs will be both engaging and be
          FUN.
          
		  A "Teacher's Study Guide" to provide guidance for how to use the 
		  program in a class, including activity ideas, discussion questions, 
		  and additional sources. Steps
      in completing this assignment: 
        
          
		Begin this 
		assignment by discussing the potential topics suggested below with your team. 
        Determine what each topic might involve and what knowledge your team
        already possesses that might be useful in training younger students or 
		  other users to
        be more effective consumers of news or other media nformation. Topics will be
        assigned to teams on a first come-first served basis.  Your
          team may propose a topic not on the list below with approval from the
          instructor.
          
		  Once you have selected a topic and had it approved, you will need to 
		  select a news story (or other media message) that will be linked in 
		  your "program" and will be an effective example to illustrate the 
		  concepts you intend to  teach your users.
          
		  Next, with your 
		  selected 
		  news story located, you may wish to schedule a meeting with a local 
		  expert suggested by your instructor (e.g. Profs. Angotti or Kristiansen, Library Dir. Sayre, 
		  Review Atlas Editor Jake Bolitho, etc.).  
          Determine
          the news/media literacy ideas you will present.  Remember, less is generally better.  
		  A few important ideas that are well illustrated which the users can 
		  clearly understand and then 
		  see  immediately in your application to the linked news story 
		  will serve far better than a lot of
          material that will be quickly forgotten.
          Lastly,
          create an introduction that will be vivid, gain attention, and
          establish that your program has significance for the users you are 
		  training AND a conclusion that encourages students to be better 
		  consumers of news and media information in the future by using this 
		  material. 
          
		  Include 
		  a "Works Cited slide at the end.
          
		  TEST your program to determine if it is clear and will give the user 
		  the kind of understanding of news/media that you intended.  To do 
		  this, find several people who have no knowledge of the content of your 
		  program (naive viewers) and have them "click through" your program 
		  without any assistance from you.  Determine from your naive user 
		  what they found clear, what they found less clear, and what they found 
		  confusing or incoherent.  Also determine if they learned what you 
		  wanted them to learn.  do the remember the key concepts and can 
		  they apply them to a new media message?  Keep the stuff that is 
		  working and fix the problems revealed.
          Once you have finished the program, create a short 
		  (1-2 pages) study guide that would be useful to teachers, librarians 
		  or others who might incorporate your news literacy program into a 
		  class or other learning setting.  The study guide should include 
		  defintions of terms, discussion questions, ideas for in-class 
		  activities or out-of-class assignments that could go along with the 
		  program, and a list of additional resources (e.g. the News Literacy 
		  Center) Advice:   
        
          Keep
          things thoughtful and useful but SIMPLE
          Use
          lots of VIVID SUPPORT material to illustrate your points
          Be
          sure the users you train can see HOW to use this material and WHY it 
		  is worth their time
          throughout the program.
          Keep
          the students ACTIVELY ENGAGED as they move through your PowerPoint or 
		  Prezi.  Don't let them
          become passive observers.   
		Programs 
		will be graded on the following basis: 
		  
		  
		  How well a "user" of your 
		materials can understand and apply the concepts you introduce in your 
		program without additional or previous knowledge, 
		  
		  
		  How 
		  effective the "program" functions as a  
		  stand-alone learning resource,  
		  
		  How
		  accurate and
        appropriate are the concepts your team includes in the program,
		  
		  
		  How 
		  well 
		illustrated/applied the concepts are through the news story or media 
		message you have selected. 
		  
		  How 
		  well organized your
        program is, how vivid and effective support material your team uses is 
		in engaging and clarifying concepts, 
		  
		  How effective
        the program is likely to be at getting users to apply what the just learned 
		in later experiences with news or other mesdia information sources,
		  
		  
		  How
          involved all members of the team seem to have been in the development
        and presentation of the training program. 
		Information and Media Literacy Resources
 
		
		The Center for News Literacy: Digital Resource Center 
			(follow other links as well) 
	  The News Literacy Project: Learn Channel
 
	  Gateway for Media 
			Literacy Education  (check 
	  out Reading Room and Best Practices) 
	  Media Literacy Online 
			Project 
	  
	  Information Literacy Resources Gateway (ACRL)
 
			
			ASSIGNMENT EVALUATION FORM      [ Preliminary Team Progress 
		Reports:  Thurs., Nov. 6 ] 
	    
		
		DUE DATES:   Thurs. & Tues., Nov. 20 & 25 - in class team reports 
		  
 
		Potential News / Media Literacy Program Topics 
		  
		  
		       
		  Broadcast News:  What 
		  Makes News News.  Why did 
		  this particular story become news for a national American network at 
		  the time it was first made available?
		   [I recommend selecting a 
		  single, video news story from CNN’s or Al Jazeera America’s web site 
		  for your news artifact as they remain archived and available much 
		  longer and more reliably than news stories from the broadcast 
		  networks.]
 
 
		  
		  ·        
		  
		  Broadcast News: 
		  The Visual Impact.  How 
		  do elements of the videos, still photo’s and various graphics (text 
		  and otherwise) influence and change the viewer’s interpretation of the 
		  story. 
		   [I recommend selecting a single, video news story from CNN’s 
		  or Al Jazeera America’s web site for your news artifact as they remain 
		  archived and available much longer and more reliably than news stories 
		  from the broadcast networks.]
 
 
		  
		  ·        
		  
		  Broadcast News: 
		  Distortions.  How do 
		  factors such as ordering, the need for drama, access, source 
		  influences, and themes cause news stories to differ from the real 
		  events they depict in ways that influence the viewer’s interpretation 
		  of the story.
		   [I recommend selecting a 
		  single, video news story from CNN’s or Al Jazeera America’s web site 
		  for your news artifact as they remain archived and available much 
		  longer and more reliably than news stories from the broadcast 
		  networks.]
 
 
		  
		  ·        
		  
		  Print News: 
		  Assembling the Story. 
		  How does a local news event become a story in the newspaper? 
		  What are the roles of the reporter and the editor? 
		  Where does the information come from and what happens when it’s 
		  not all there? 
		   [I recommend selecting a 
		  single, complex or controversial news story from the archives of the 
		  Monmouth Review Atlas and interviewing the editor about the story and 
		  how it came to be.]
 
 
		  
		  ·        
		  
		  The Wikipedia: 
		  Can We Trust It?  How 
		  is a Wikipedia article constructed and by whom? 
		  What methods exist by which the Wikipedia organization attempts 
		  to maintain accuracy?  When is 
		  the information likely to be reliable and when is it not? 
		  [I recommend finding a short but 
		  substantive Wikipedia article on a topic that may involve some 
		  controversy and explore the references and the editing history.
		   Meet with Rick Sayre, Hewes 
		  Library Director to discuss this information source and when it can be 
		  trusted.]
 
 
		  
		  ·        
		  
		  The News Skeptic: 
		  When to Double Check. 
		  What are some clues that material in a news or information 
		  article (or web page/blog or political commercial) may not be 
		  dependable?  What are some 
		  strategies to follow in order to check the accuracy of specific facts 
		  and the general conclusions of the message? 
		  [ I recommend selecting a very 
		  short web article or blog, esp. a political opinion piece or a 
		  political TV ad on YouTube, and working through the fact-checking 
		  process including best sources to use.]
 
 
		  
		  ·        
		  
		  Background: Getting the Big 
		  Picture.  We often 
		  encounter news stories that tell us details about something that is 
		  currently happening, but how do we find the background that led to 
		  these recent events?  When 
		  events are complex, controversial and have a history, it can be 
		  difficult for the news consumer to understand current events. 
		  What are strategies the consumer can use to understand the 
		  context of current events? 
		  [I recommend selecting a single, 
		  video news story from CNN’s or Al Jazeera America’s web site or a 
		  short article from a major newspaper, say something like ISIS and 
		  “true” Islam or Ebola and epidemics  for 
		  your news artifact.  Then 
		  find useful background on the issues and show the steps for finding 
		  good background information that your users can follow in other 
		  situations.  Meet with Rick 
		  Sayre, Hewes Library Director to discuss strategies for finding good 
		  overview sources.] 
        
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