Friday, September 30, 2011

Media Literacy in Civics

"However we define it, we must agree that today's students, our future citizens, should be able to marshal thinking skills to spot 'eye-witless news... a twinkle of the airwaves' (Bennett, 2001) or 'manufactured news' (Postman, 1992) if they are to reason intelligently about societal issues and draw meaningful conclusions about political candidates."

What this is saying is that students today need to be able to think critically and to be able to analyze things so that they can become good citizens when they become adults. So many students even at the college level, if they were asked to take the citizenship exam, they would fail and fail miserably, yet immigrants can pass it to become citizens. Students today just do not care about the country that is provided for them and they need to start becoming more educated so that they can contribute to society and be informed voters. Teaching media literacy will allow students to be able to break down different pieces of media and interpret them and be informed from them.



This shows just how the majority of the upcoming generation are; they really don't care who gets the presidency so they don't pay attention to anything about them.

Citations

Abilock, D. (2003, November/December). A seven-power lens on 21st century literacy .


http://standupforamerica.wordpress.com/2010/03/22/is-voting-a-right-should-it-be-regulated/

2 comments:

  1. I've never understood why so many young people do not take politics more seriously. It's their future at stake! It's nice to know some students are paying attention!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I agree. Students need to learn how to think or they will have a hard time making decisions in the future.

    ReplyDelete