The 
Fact Finder book series by 
Capstone Publishing helped us design one of our signature 
TIME (technology, information, and media education) project-based learning units called 
Question It.
 This set of eight books provides a perfect way to introduce media 
literacy to students in the elementary classroom. Each book covers a 
different media, including magazines, television, movies, music, news, 
video and computer gaming, online, and new media. Their catchy titles, 
such as 
Coming Distractions (movies), 
TV Takeover (television) and 
Music Madness (music), appeal to kids as well.
The similarity in design and format makes it easy for students to work in 
groups on a particular topic, and each book revolves around the five key
 questions toward becoming media literate:
Who made the message and why?
Who is the message for?
How might others view the message differently?
What is left out of the message?
How does the message get and keep my attention?
In addition, 
each book
 provides an overview of the people who work in the different media 
industries and the lingo peppered throughout, giving kids the language 
to understand terminology such as target audience and product placement, 
as well as other lingo particular to the field.
By using this series as a springboard for their project, the students 
learned about the reality of what goes on behind the scenes on their 
topic. They produced their own media pieces to teach their peers about 
the validity of online media, marketing techniques in magazines, or the 
gimmicks used in music promotion and movie hype. This included 
understanding the techniques used for product placement, fact verses 
opinion, appeal, and the art of persuasion.
The students used their research to create iMovies to inform others how to question what they 
see, hear and read in the media, and they made a formal presentation showcasing their work at our local 
Apple store. Plain 
and simple, these young media moguls took control and came away with a 
wealth of understanding about media conglomerates. Essentially, they 
became smart consumers by learning how to be media-savvy producers to 
teach others.
For more information on how we integrate 
media literacy into student learning, please see our earlier 
posts on the topic.
 
Pretty good post. I just stumbled upon your blog and wanted to say that I have really enjoyed reading your blog posts.
ReplyDeletemusic
Thanks for the informative blog. The place else may possibly just I get that kind of info written in such a excellent approach? I’ve a venture that I’m just now operating on, and I’ve been on the glance out for such info.
ReplyDeleteFans can engage in conversation and interaction with each other by using manga owl as a gathering place for manga and book enthusiasts.
ReplyDelete