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Approaching Media Literacy in Civic Life among Urban Youth, 2021

 Item
Identifier: md_2021summer_hsu_melody.pdf

Scope and Content Note

From the Series:

The series contains Master's theses from 1943 to present. The theses consist of either a production book and a media component or solely a production book. The production books were originally submitted as physical bound copies, but were later submitted digitally. The physical production books are stored offsite and the digital production books are stored in the College's preservation repository.

The media components consist of U-matic tapes, VHS tapes, CDs, DVDs, and Blu-rays and changed to digital submissions in 2020. There are also a handful of audiocassette tapes and one USB. The media components are stored onsite at the Archives.

Dates

  • 2021

Creator

Conditions Governing Use

The thesis is restricted due to the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), permission from the author is required before you can view the thesis

Extent

98 pages (98 pages)

Language of Materials

From the record group: English

From the record group: Chinese

From the record group: Spanish; Castilian

Overview

"Given rapid technological advances "Young people today are reading, manipulating, and producing texts in ways that are fundamentally different than in the past" (Garcia, 2015). If we can acknowledge that having a core set of literacies extends into the digital space, we must then move to development of building competencies to enable critical media use. Further, research focused on the intersection of youth and media literacy assumes that "young people are not only interested and capable, but also have a right to be engaged with media given its dominant role in U.S. society" (Johnston-Goodstar, Richards-Schuster & Sethi, 2014). Increasing concern is being recognized as youth develop their identity amidst severe uncertainties ranging from the environmental crisis to political extremism. The implication is that, if the coming generation will be the main players shaping the digital future, it is crucial that they gain the competencies that will enable them to engage digital environments. Scholars are recognizing that without an educated, informed, and literate citizenry, strong democracy is impossible (Kellner & Share, 2007). This work explores the relationship between developing media competencies and civic identity. Given rapid changes to technology that have transformed norms, society requires a critical media literacy education to empower individuals to read and produce media messages to become strong participants in a democracy." -- Abstract

Physical Location

RG 010.06E Engagement Lab

Physical Description

98 pages

Repository Details

Part of the Emerson College Archives and Special Collections Repository

Contact:
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