This document discusses using media and critical pedagogy to promote multicultural education. It argues that education must address media representations that construct understandings of gender, race and class, and that mainstream media often exacerbates inequalities. The document presents ideas from a book that shows how media can be used to teach multiculturalism across disciplines. It advocates teaching students to thoughtfully analyze cultural representations and diversity in order to empower individuals and strengthen democracy.
This document provides an introduction and overview of Michel Foucault's work and its significance for understanding education. It discusses how Foucault has greatly influenced contemporary thought and crossed over from academia to broader cultural spheres. To understand what Foucault accomplished and its importance for education, the document examines Foucault's key ideas and methods, his relationship to Marxism and historical materialism, and the implications of his work for educational research. The author aims to show that Foucault advocated his own form of historical materialism and that his writings have radical implications for how we understand what it means to be human and for envisioning possible futures.
The required readings discuss issues related to multiculturalism and anti-racist education. They highlight the importance of representing diversity in schools and among teaching staff to better serve multicultural student populations. A gap exists between teachers and diverse students due to a lack of cross-cultural experience and knowledge among teaching candidates. Racism in schools can be addressed by empowering student voices from different backgrounds and ensuring all students feel they can succeed academically and socially. Multicultural education aims to promote democracy and equality by acknowledging different ethnic contributions and responding to varied student learning needs.
This document summarizes key sections and examples from the book "Rethinking Multicultural Education: Teaching for Racial and Cultural Justice" edited by Wayne Au. The book provides a framework for anti-racist, social justice education and gives concrete classroom strategies and lessons. It addresses issues of race, culture, language, and student identity. Various chapters model ways for teachers to critically address issues of inequality, confront notions of race in the classroom, and create learning environments that value students' unique backgrounds and cultures. The goal is to help educators apply anti-racist and multicultural principles in practical ways to transform their pedagogy and empower all students.
The required readings discuss issues related to multiculturalism and anti-racist education. They highlight the importance of having a diverse teaching workforce that reflects the student population and experiences. However, many teachers currently lack cross-cultural experience and knowledge of effective multicultural teaching practices. The readings also note that racism is still present in schools and negatively impacts student learning and well-being. To combat this, educators must empower both teachers and students from all backgrounds and ensure all voices are represented in the curriculum. An inclusive, multicultural approach can help promote democracy, equality and success for all students.
This document provides an overview and summary of the book "Rethinking Multicultural Education" by Au (2009). It discusses how the book aims to provide a practical yet critical vision of anti-racist, social justice education. The book defines multicultural education as being grounded in student experiences, critiquing Eurocentric knowledge, and connecting to struggles for social justice. It also outlines four sections that provide concrete classroom examples related to issues like language/culture, student identities, and confronting race. The overall document serves to introduce readers to the key aspects and approaches covered within the book.
Response Paper To Literacy In American Lives June 2005 Buffy HamiltonBuffy Hamilton
The document is a response paper by Buffy Hamilton discussing key ideas from Literacy in American Lives by Deborah Brandt. Hamilton summarizes that Brandt views literacy as being heavily shaped by one's culture and sponsors of literacy. Literacy learning is a dialogic process influenced by social and economic forces. Brandt examines how individuals' literacy experiences and opportunities are molded by their literacy sponsors, like family, school, work, etc. Hamilton raises questions about the purpose of education and cultivating lifelong readers in light of Brandt's analysis.
Considering the Moral Complexity of Adolescents in Divided Societies (Freedma...Ali Hawkins
This document summarizes a research paper about a study called DECIDES that examines how adolescents develop moral reasoning and civic engagement in divided societies. The study looks at 9th and 10th grade students in Northern Ireland, South Africa, and the US to understand how they reconcile personal and global history with current events. By studying teaching about social divisions, conflict, and the future in these societies, which all have legacies of oppression, the goal is to help develop youth who are morally thoughtful and civically active. The paper discusses debates around teaching ethics in schools and the complexity of moral development during adolescence. It also describes previous related work by the author in Rwanda on using history education to address social issues after mass violence.
This document discusses international understanding and the role of education in promoting it. It defines international understanding as developing insight into other cultures beyond one's own interests and seeing all people as part of a global community. Narrow nationalism can create conflicts, so education must foster world citizenship. The document outlines principles of international understanding like respect for all people and awareness of interdependence. It also discusses barriers like secrecy, inequality and prejudice. Education is seen as crucial for providing knowledge of other cultures and developing critical thinking to appreciate diversity and work towards global cooperation.
This document provides an introduction and overview of Michel Foucault's work and its significance for understanding education. It discusses how Foucault has greatly influenced contemporary thought and crossed over from academia to broader cultural spheres. To understand what Foucault accomplished and its importance for education, the document examines Foucault's key ideas and methods, his relationship to Marxism and historical materialism, and the implications of his work for educational research. The author aims to show that Foucault advocated his own form of historical materialism and that his writings have radical implications for how we understand what it means to be human and for envisioning possible futures.
The required readings discuss issues related to multiculturalism and anti-racist education. They highlight the importance of representing diversity in schools and among teaching staff to better serve multicultural student populations. A gap exists between teachers and diverse students due to a lack of cross-cultural experience and knowledge among teaching candidates. Racism in schools can be addressed by empowering student voices from different backgrounds and ensuring all students feel they can succeed academically and socially. Multicultural education aims to promote democracy and equality by acknowledging different ethnic contributions and responding to varied student learning needs.
This document summarizes key sections and examples from the book "Rethinking Multicultural Education: Teaching for Racial and Cultural Justice" edited by Wayne Au. The book provides a framework for anti-racist, social justice education and gives concrete classroom strategies and lessons. It addresses issues of race, culture, language, and student identity. Various chapters model ways for teachers to critically address issues of inequality, confront notions of race in the classroom, and create learning environments that value students' unique backgrounds and cultures. The goal is to help educators apply anti-racist and multicultural principles in practical ways to transform their pedagogy and empower all students.
The required readings discuss issues related to multiculturalism and anti-racist education. They highlight the importance of having a diverse teaching workforce that reflects the student population and experiences. However, many teachers currently lack cross-cultural experience and knowledge of effective multicultural teaching practices. The readings also note that racism is still present in schools and negatively impacts student learning and well-being. To combat this, educators must empower both teachers and students from all backgrounds and ensure all voices are represented in the curriculum. An inclusive, multicultural approach can help promote democracy, equality and success for all students.
This document provides an overview and summary of the book "Rethinking Multicultural Education" by Au (2009). It discusses how the book aims to provide a practical yet critical vision of anti-racist, social justice education. The book defines multicultural education as being grounded in student experiences, critiquing Eurocentric knowledge, and connecting to struggles for social justice. It also outlines four sections that provide concrete classroom examples related to issues like language/culture, student identities, and confronting race. The overall document serves to introduce readers to the key aspects and approaches covered within the book.
Response Paper To Literacy In American Lives June 2005 Buffy HamiltonBuffy Hamilton
The document is a response paper by Buffy Hamilton discussing key ideas from Literacy in American Lives by Deborah Brandt. Hamilton summarizes that Brandt views literacy as being heavily shaped by one's culture and sponsors of literacy. Literacy learning is a dialogic process influenced by social and economic forces. Brandt examines how individuals' literacy experiences and opportunities are molded by their literacy sponsors, like family, school, work, etc. Hamilton raises questions about the purpose of education and cultivating lifelong readers in light of Brandt's analysis.
Considering the Moral Complexity of Adolescents in Divided Societies (Freedma...Ali Hawkins
This document summarizes a research paper about a study called DECIDES that examines how adolescents develop moral reasoning and civic engagement in divided societies. The study looks at 9th and 10th grade students in Northern Ireland, South Africa, and the US to understand how they reconcile personal and global history with current events. By studying teaching about social divisions, conflict, and the future in these societies, which all have legacies of oppression, the goal is to help develop youth who are morally thoughtful and civically active. The paper discusses debates around teaching ethics in schools and the complexity of moral development during adolescence. It also describes previous related work by the author in Rwanda on using history education to address social issues after mass violence.
This document discusses international understanding and the role of education in promoting it. It defines international understanding as developing insight into other cultures beyond one's own interests and seeing all people as part of a global community. Narrow nationalism can create conflicts, so education must foster world citizenship. The document outlines principles of international understanding like respect for all people and awareness of interdependence. It also discusses barriers like secrecy, inequality and prejudice. Education is seen as crucial for providing knowledge of other cultures and developing critical thinking to appreciate diversity and work towards global cooperation.
The document discusses the concept of internationalism and the need for its development through education. It defines internationalism as developing insight beyond one's own interests to appreciate other cultures, seeing individuals as global citizens rather than just members of a single nation. It argues internationalism is needed for world peace, cooperation, and addressing global issues. UNESCO and education systems have important roles in fostering internationalism by promoting mutual understanding and global citizenship through curriculum, exchanges, and celebrating diversity. Overall, the document advocates for reconstructing education to cultivate a view of the world as a single community.
Internationalism refers to developing understanding and cooperation between all people and cultures worldwide. It involves seeing oneself as both a member of one's own country as well as a global citizen. Modern technology and economic interdependence have increased the need for internationalism to promote peace, welfare, and mutual understanding between nations. Education plays a key role in developing an international outlook and international organizations like UNESCO work to advance internationalism through various educational and cultural programs and exchanges.
Assessment for cultural learning in contexts for students learning. By an interchange for minimun needs. Indeed this can enhange your qualifications in social studies habilities in language. By Vielka Reece D.
Global Citizenship: A One-World Curriculum for Intercultural Competence (L. F...Linda Fajardo
An Intercultural Competencies Course Curriculum for Nurturing Global Citizenship in K-12. A look at the needs for movement from tolerance of social diversity to acceptance through ethnorelativism. For more information please write to iConnectCommunity@gmail.com.
Promoting and Applying Intercultural Education through Literary Textbooks in ...paperpublications3
Abstract: Until recently Greece was a migration sender rather than a host country. But, over the last 20 years, things have changed and, according to the National Statistical Authority (2011), the percentage of aliens residing permanently in Greece is 8.34%, of which 52.7% come from Albania. Thus, the student population is significantly heterogeneous, and the demand for new curriculums and textbooks which are in accordance with universal agreements and conventions that promote equality, mutual respect and human rights was intense.
However, how can we create a cohesive and democratic society while at the same time allowing citizens to maintain their ethnic culture and identity? These two concepts, interculturalism, on the one hand and nationality on the other, were the motive forces for writing this paper.
In particular, this paper aims at examining, through content analysis of the texts and the activities and by following the summary method, how potential it is to implement intercultural education through literary textbooks, which are used in the Greek primary schools over the last years (since 2001 and 2006). The results showed that the references to high interculturalism prevail. There are a few references to the additive or to the contributions approach, while the presence of strong national elements is not intense. The references to mild nationalism are increased.
The document discusses whether universities can truly be havens for intercultural dialogue. It makes three key points:
1) Historically, universities promoted internationalism but this was limited to prominent schools. Today, international students and scholars primarily flow from developing to developed countries.
2) In peripheral countries like Brazil, foreign students and professors are few. Internationalism is concentrated in famous universities of developed nations.
3) While developed university centers see interaction between diverse cultures, the cultural exchange is often one-sided, with developing countries learning but not necessarily teaching. Universities also shape a common culture that may obscure cultural differences.
However, the growth of fields like anthropology and history have increased understanding of
This document discusses using literature to promote global solidarity in education. It argues that literature can help break down barriers of language, culture, and race by providing access to translations from around the world. World literature circulates works beyond their country of origin and offers opportunities to learn about ethical issues of injustice and inequality. An effective curriculum and teaching methods are needed to bring global perspectives into the classroom and prepare students as global citizens. The ultimate goal is to build a sense of belonging to the global community and foster responsibility among citizens.
This document summarizes a study that examined the perceptions of 14 grade 6 students in the Chinese Bilingual Program in Western Canada. The study aimed to understand students' perceived language abilities, experiences speaking Chinese, understanding of multiculturalism, sense of belonging, ethnic identity, views on how bilingual education shaped their thinking, and reasons for enrolling in the program. The document provides theoretical background on bilingual education and reviews research showing that maintaining one's first language can positively impact academic and socio-psychological development, while pressures to assimilate can threaten minority students' mental health, self-esteem, and identity development.
The classroom as a global community by maricor candelaria and maricel elgobeedivb
The document discusses globalization and developing a global perspective in education. It defines globalization as increased human contact and interdependence due to advances in technology. To build understanding across cultures, individuals need flexibility, ambiguity tolerance, and an understanding of how culture shapes behavior. Education has a key role in facilitating this by developing skills like empathy, interconnectedness, and cross-cultural understanding. Developing a global perspective throughout the curriculum helps students live effectively in an interdependent world. This includes learning firsthand about other cultures, collaborating internationally, and developing cognitive skills and positive attitudes.
Geert Driessen (2001) IRE Ethnicity, forms of capital, and educational achiev...Driessen Research
This document summarizes research on how cultural capital influences educational achievement, particularly for ethnic minority groups. It reviews studies from the Netherlands and US that have tested Pierre Bourdieu's theory that social class influences educational inequality through the transmission of cultural capital. The research presented found mixed results, with some studies supporting the theory for dominant social groups but not for ethnic minorities. It concludes that applying the concept of cultural capital to ethnic groups is challenging and more research is needed that differentiates between ethnic groups rather than treating them as homogeneous.
The document discusses cultural pluralism and multiculturalism. It defines culture and cultural pluralism as the acceptance of different ethnic or social groups within a society that develop their own cultures, as long as they are consistent with the wider society's laws and values. Multiculturalism values diverse perspectives and cultural relativity. The goals of multicultural education are discussed, including recognizing differences and similarities among people, and encouraging cooperative social skills through a diverse curriculum.
An analysis of the serious problems arising from the so-called frozen conflicts in the post-soviet region forms the basis of this policy paper with particular reference to human security in South Ossetia, Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh and Transnistria. Despite many similarities among them, the entities are not entirely homogeneous and since the conflicts vary in severity and scope, an individualized approach is required in the provision of much needed human security in each.
The document summarizes the Research Journalism Initiative (RJI), which aims to foster understanding between students in the US and Palestine through educational programs using technology and dialogue. It discusses findings that many young Americans lack geographic and cultural knowledge. The RJI program involves workshops for Palestinian students, US students exploring RJI resources, and live video conferences between the groups. Student responses show the programs help humanize different perspectives and see issues in a more complex, solution-oriented way. The goal is to better prepare students for an interconnected world through experiential, question-based learning and humanizing different viewpoints.
Intercultural education aims to promote understanding, tolerance, and respect between all nations, racial and religious groups. It seeks to enhance intercultural relations and increase acceptance of those who are different. The main objectives of intercultural education are to train people to perceive, accept, and respect diversity in order to mediate social relations. Intercultural education provides benefits such as the promotion of curiosity about cultural differences, the development of critical thinking, and the prevention of racism. For intercultural education to be successful, it must create a balanced curriculum, provide opportunities for communication between diverse groups, and present information from different perspectives.
- The document analyzes how different educational factors like medium of instruction (English vs Bengali) and curriculum type (national vs foreign) impact the cultural values and tendencies of Bangladeshi teenagers.
- It finds that the core cultural values are largely unaffected, with only 1 of 6 values influenced by medium of instruction and 2 values influenced by curriculum type. However, cultural practices are more influenced.
- Specifically, it finds masculinity tendencies are lower for students studying in English medium compared to Bengali medium, and for those studying foreign curriculums compared to national. Uncertainty avoidance is also higher for those studying foreign curriculums.
This document discusses using literature to promote global solidarity in education. It argues that literature can help break down barriers of language, culture and race by giving access to works from around the world. This exposes students to diverse perspectives and issues of social justice. Effective teaching requires developing cultural competency and creating an inclusive environment. The goal is to prepare students as global citizens who respect diversity, think globally, and strive to resolve conflicts non-violently.
The document discusses national integration in India and the role of education in promoting it. It defines national integration as bringing different economic, social, and cultural groups within a tolerable range and aims to reduce prejudices. Education can play a potent role by imparting knowledge, developing thinking skills, training emotions, and organizing practical activities. Various techniques are suggested to promote national integration through education, including celebrating national days, debates, discussions, talks on different cultures, and displaying messages of unity from religious leaders.
Designing of an automated power meter readingManoj Kollam
This document describes the design of an automated power meter reading system using Zigbee communication. The system uses an ARM microcontroller and Zigbee module to automatically collect power meter readings and transmit the data to a remote server. It avoids human intervention in meter reading and billing. If a consumer fails to pay their bill, the power connection can be remotely disconnected. The system provides efficient meter reading and billing while reducing errors and maintenance costs compared to traditional manual meter reading.
Design and implemation of an enhanced dds based digitalManoj Kollam
This paper proposes the design and implementation of an enhanced direct digital synthesis (DDS)-based digital modulator that supports multiple modulation schemes. The design enhances the basic DDS architecture with minimal additional hardware to provide user selection of different modulation techniques using a single unit. The modulator architecture consists of a phase accumulator, phase-to-amplitude converter, and other digital logic blocks. The design is implemented on a Spartan-3A FPGA using VHDL and can generate various modulated output signals for software-defined radio applications.
The document discusses the concept of internationalism and the need for its development through education. It defines internationalism as developing insight beyond one's own interests to appreciate other cultures, seeing individuals as global citizens rather than just members of a single nation. It argues internationalism is needed for world peace, cooperation, and addressing global issues. UNESCO and education systems have important roles in fostering internationalism by promoting mutual understanding and global citizenship through curriculum, exchanges, and celebrating diversity. Overall, the document advocates for reconstructing education to cultivate a view of the world as a single community.
Internationalism refers to developing understanding and cooperation between all people and cultures worldwide. It involves seeing oneself as both a member of one's own country as well as a global citizen. Modern technology and economic interdependence have increased the need for internationalism to promote peace, welfare, and mutual understanding between nations. Education plays a key role in developing an international outlook and international organizations like UNESCO work to advance internationalism through various educational and cultural programs and exchanges.
Assessment for cultural learning in contexts for students learning. By an interchange for minimun needs. Indeed this can enhange your qualifications in social studies habilities in language. By Vielka Reece D.
Global Citizenship: A One-World Curriculum for Intercultural Competence (L. F...Linda Fajardo
An Intercultural Competencies Course Curriculum for Nurturing Global Citizenship in K-12. A look at the needs for movement from tolerance of social diversity to acceptance through ethnorelativism. For more information please write to iConnectCommunity@gmail.com.
Promoting and Applying Intercultural Education through Literary Textbooks in ...paperpublications3
Abstract: Until recently Greece was a migration sender rather than a host country. But, over the last 20 years, things have changed and, according to the National Statistical Authority (2011), the percentage of aliens residing permanently in Greece is 8.34%, of which 52.7% come from Albania. Thus, the student population is significantly heterogeneous, and the demand for new curriculums and textbooks which are in accordance with universal agreements and conventions that promote equality, mutual respect and human rights was intense.
However, how can we create a cohesive and democratic society while at the same time allowing citizens to maintain their ethnic culture and identity? These two concepts, interculturalism, on the one hand and nationality on the other, were the motive forces for writing this paper.
In particular, this paper aims at examining, through content analysis of the texts and the activities and by following the summary method, how potential it is to implement intercultural education through literary textbooks, which are used in the Greek primary schools over the last years (since 2001 and 2006). The results showed that the references to high interculturalism prevail. There are a few references to the additive or to the contributions approach, while the presence of strong national elements is not intense. The references to mild nationalism are increased.
The document discusses whether universities can truly be havens for intercultural dialogue. It makes three key points:
1) Historically, universities promoted internationalism but this was limited to prominent schools. Today, international students and scholars primarily flow from developing to developed countries.
2) In peripheral countries like Brazil, foreign students and professors are few. Internationalism is concentrated in famous universities of developed nations.
3) While developed university centers see interaction between diverse cultures, the cultural exchange is often one-sided, with developing countries learning but not necessarily teaching. Universities also shape a common culture that may obscure cultural differences.
However, the growth of fields like anthropology and history have increased understanding of
This document discusses using literature to promote global solidarity in education. It argues that literature can help break down barriers of language, culture, and race by providing access to translations from around the world. World literature circulates works beyond their country of origin and offers opportunities to learn about ethical issues of injustice and inequality. An effective curriculum and teaching methods are needed to bring global perspectives into the classroom and prepare students as global citizens. The ultimate goal is to build a sense of belonging to the global community and foster responsibility among citizens.
This document summarizes a study that examined the perceptions of 14 grade 6 students in the Chinese Bilingual Program in Western Canada. The study aimed to understand students' perceived language abilities, experiences speaking Chinese, understanding of multiculturalism, sense of belonging, ethnic identity, views on how bilingual education shaped their thinking, and reasons for enrolling in the program. The document provides theoretical background on bilingual education and reviews research showing that maintaining one's first language can positively impact academic and socio-psychological development, while pressures to assimilate can threaten minority students' mental health, self-esteem, and identity development.
The classroom as a global community by maricor candelaria and maricel elgobeedivb
The document discusses globalization and developing a global perspective in education. It defines globalization as increased human contact and interdependence due to advances in technology. To build understanding across cultures, individuals need flexibility, ambiguity tolerance, and an understanding of how culture shapes behavior. Education has a key role in facilitating this by developing skills like empathy, interconnectedness, and cross-cultural understanding. Developing a global perspective throughout the curriculum helps students live effectively in an interdependent world. This includes learning firsthand about other cultures, collaborating internationally, and developing cognitive skills and positive attitudes.
Geert Driessen (2001) IRE Ethnicity, forms of capital, and educational achiev...Driessen Research
This document summarizes research on how cultural capital influences educational achievement, particularly for ethnic minority groups. It reviews studies from the Netherlands and US that have tested Pierre Bourdieu's theory that social class influences educational inequality through the transmission of cultural capital. The research presented found mixed results, with some studies supporting the theory for dominant social groups but not for ethnic minorities. It concludes that applying the concept of cultural capital to ethnic groups is challenging and more research is needed that differentiates between ethnic groups rather than treating them as homogeneous.
The document discusses cultural pluralism and multiculturalism. It defines culture and cultural pluralism as the acceptance of different ethnic or social groups within a society that develop their own cultures, as long as they are consistent with the wider society's laws and values. Multiculturalism values diverse perspectives and cultural relativity. The goals of multicultural education are discussed, including recognizing differences and similarities among people, and encouraging cooperative social skills through a diverse curriculum.
An analysis of the serious problems arising from the so-called frozen conflicts in the post-soviet region forms the basis of this policy paper with particular reference to human security in South Ossetia, Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh and Transnistria. Despite many similarities among them, the entities are not entirely homogeneous and since the conflicts vary in severity and scope, an individualized approach is required in the provision of much needed human security in each.
The document summarizes the Research Journalism Initiative (RJI), which aims to foster understanding between students in the US and Palestine through educational programs using technology and dialogue. It discusses findings that many young Americans lack geographic and cultural knowledge. The RJI program involves workshops for Palestinian students, US students exploring RJI resources, and live video conferences between the groups. Student responses show the programs help humanize different perspectives and see issues in a more complex, solution-oriented way. The goal is to better prepare students for an interconnected world through experiential, question-based learning and humanizing different viewpoints.
Intercultural education aims to promote understanding, tolerance, and respect between all nations, racial and religious groups. It seeks to enhance intercultural relations and increase acceptance of those who are different. The main objectives of intercultural education are to train people to perceive, accept, and respect diversity in order to mediate social relations. Intercultural education provides benefits such as the promotion of curiosity about cultural differences, the development of critical thinking, and the prevention of racism. For intercultural education to be successful, it must create a balanced curriculum, provide opportunities for communication between diverse groups, and present information from different perspectives.
- The document analyzes how different educational factors like medium of instruction (English vs Bengali) and curriculum type (national vs foreign) impact the cultural values and tendencies of Bangladeshi teenagers.
- It finds that the core cultural values are largely unaffected, with only 1 of 6 values influenced by medium of instruction and 2 values influenced by curriculum type. However, cultural practices are more influenced.
- Specifically, it finds masculinity tendencies are lower for students studying in English medium compared to Bengali medium, and for those studying foreign curriculums compared to national. Uncertainty avoidance is also higher for those studying foreign curriculums.
This document discusses using literature to promote global solidarity in education. It argues that literature can help break down barriers of language, culture and race by giving access to works from around the world. This exposes students to diverse perspectives and issues of social justice. Effective teaching requires developing cultural competency and creating an inclusive environment. The goal is to prepare students as global citizens who respect diversity, think globally, and strive to resolve conflicts non-violently.
The document discusses national integration in India and the role of education in promoting it. It defines national integration as bringing different economic, social, and cultural groups within a tolerable range and aims to reduce prejudices. Education can play a potent role by imparting knowledge, developing thinking skills, training emotions, and organizing practical activities. Various techniques are suggested to promote national integration through education, including celebrating national days, debates, discussions, talks on different cultures, and displaying messages of unity from religious leaders.
Designing of an automated power meter readingManoj Kollam
This document describes the design of an automated power meter reading system using Zigbee communication. The system uses an ARM microcontroller and Zigbee module to automatically collect power meter readings and transmit the data to a remote server. It avoids human intervention in meter reading and billing. If a consumer fails to pay their bill, the power connection can be remotely disconnected. The system provides efficient meter reading and billing while reducing errors and maintenance costs compared to traditional manual meter reading.
Design and implemation of an enhanced dds based digitalManoj Kollam
This paper proposes the design and implementation of an enhanced direct digital synthesis (DDS)-based digital modulator that supports multiple modulation schemes. The design enhances the basic DDS architecture with minimal additional hardware to provide user selection of different modulation techniques using a single unit. The modulator architecture consists of a phase accumulator, phase-to-amplitude converter, and other digital logic blocks. The design is implemented on a Spartan-3A FPGA using VHDL and can generate various modulated output signals for software-defined radio applications.
Kerberos is an authentication system that uses symmetric cryptography to allow nodes on an insecure network to prove their identity to one another. It was developed at MIT to allow users to securely access services over the university's open computer network. Kerberos uses tickets and timestamps to authenticate users based on a variant of the Needham-Schroeder protocol while preventing replay attacks. The protocol relies on trusted central authentication servers and assumes all computers on the network could be compromised, so it aims to authenticate users rather than individual machines.
This document contains an agenda for a Syuroeksternal KISS event taking place on 20 December 2010. The agenda includes several discussion topics on Aqidah Akhlaq (matters of faith and morality), Fiqih (Islamic jurisprudence), and contemporary issues. Specific session topics listed are interacting with the Quran, liberal thinking from an Islamic perspective, marriage in Fiqih, contract concepts in Fiqih Muamalah, the biography of Umar ibn Khattab, and organ transplantation from an Islamic perspective. Presenters are also listed for each session.
The document lists animals available for adoption from the Sammy Foundation in Pacific Palisades, CA. It notes that the morning was spent taking photos of the animals in need of adoption and that there are even more animals not pictured. All animals are friendly and desperately need homes. The document provides a contact number for Sandra Mueller if interested in adoption.
Este documento describe los procedimientos de RCP básica para adultos. Explica que el objetivo de la RCP es suplir la respiración y la función cardíaca para evitar la muerte cerebral. Detalla los pasos del protocolo RCP que incluyen evaluar la conciencia, abrir las vías aéreas, ventilación boca a boca durante 10 segundos, evaluar el pulso y realizar 30 compresiones torácicas en 2 minutos antes de volver a evaluar. Recomienda continuar las compresiones hasta que llegue el servicio médico de emerg
Said Al Badaei is applying for a managerial position and has over 15 years of experience in human resources, management, sales, development, and customer service. He is currently the Human Resources Administration Manager at Sohar Aluminium LLC, where he manages a team of 19 HR practitioners. Al Badaei has held several key positions including Human Resources Manager, Nationalization Manager, Training Manager, and Organizational Development Manager. He has a passion for continuous improvement, lean processes, and people optimization.
Designing of an automated power meter readingManoj Kollam
This document describes the design of an automated power meter reading system using Zigbee communication. The system uses an ARM microcontroller and Zigbee module to automatically collect power meter readings and transmit the data to a remote server. It avoids human intervention in meter reading and billing. If a consumer fails to pay their bill, the power connection can be remotely disconnected. The system provides efficient meter reading and billing while reducing errors and maintenance costs compared to traditional manual meter reading.
1. Dokumen memberikan panduan lengkap untuk memasang WordPress secara gratis dengan mendapatkan domain dan hosting gratis.
2. Langkah-langkahnya meliputi mendapatkan domain gratis, mengatur name server, mendapatkan hosting gratis, menyiapkan file WordPress, mengupload file, membuat database, dan menginstal WordPress.
3. Setelah menginstal, pengguna dapat mengakses blog baru mereka melalui alamat domain yang telah didaftarkan.
La lista incluye los nombres de varios pastores e instructores religiosos, así como la palabra "Igreja" que significa iglesia en portugués, e "Adolecentes" que se refiere a adolescentes.
Kerberos is an authentication protocol that uses symmetric cryptography to allow nodes on an insecure network to prove their identity to one another. It was developed at MIT to allow users to securely access services over the university's network. Kerberos uses tickets and authenticators encrypted with shared keys to verify users' identities without transmitting passwords over the network. It provides secure authentication through a trusted third party called the Key Distribution Center that issues tickets for authentication.
Este documento describe las causas que ponen en peligro la vida como el paro cardíaco, paro respiratorio, accidente cerebrovascular y hemorragia profusa. Explica que el paro cardíaco es la muerte súbita que ocurre dentro de las 24 horas del inicio de los síntomas y la importancia de actuar dentro de los primeros 4 minutos para evitar daño cerebral. Además, detalla los objetivos, protocolo y pasos de la reanimación cardiopulmonar básica para suplir la respiración y función cardíaca hasta la llegada de
Dokumen ini berisi daftar nama delapan orang dan satu organisasi gereja. Terdapat delapan nama individu yaitu Pr. Theu, Ir. Karla Theu, Ir. Clauber, Ir. Vera, Ir. Francisca, Ir. Luana, Ir. Isabel dan satu organisasi yaitu Igreja serta kelompok Adolecentes.
The document lists various websites related to economics data, financial data, and databases. It categorizes websites for economics related data, financial data, and databases. It also lists some websites that would be good to visit daily for news, sports, downloads, and more.
The document outlines key coaching techniques to help individuals realize their potential without demoralizing them. It discusses establishing interdependent relationships between leaders and team members and evaluating, demonstrating, and consolidating to provide feedback and encouragement. The evaluation process involves explaining tasks, checking for understanding, analyzing performance, listening to needs, and aiming to improve work. Demonstrating involves modeling tasks and encouraging learning. Limitations involve allowing development, managing expectations, and stopping incorrect actions. Consolidation focuses on having positive discussions to identify gaps and design action plans to encourage improvement.
This document discusses Kerberos, an authentication system that allows nodes communicating over an insecure network to verify each other's identity. It provides a history of Kerberos, an overview of how it works using tickets and session keys, the roles of various components like the KDC, and advantages like password encryption. Kerberos allows for secure authentication in open network computing environments and has been widely adopted by companies. Public key cryptography also enhances Kerberos by easing key distribution.
This document discusses multicultural education and its implementation in a community and school system. It interviews several administrators and community members about cultural diversity in the local schools and community. It finds that the school system and community lack diversity, especially in high-level positions. Community members want to see more done to promote multicultural education and representation of minorities.
Dr. Valerie Ooka Pang; Annie Nguyen, Requa Anne StathisWilliam Kritsonis
This document summarizes the Caring-Centered Multicultural Education framework. It integrates the Ethic of Care, Sociocultural Theory of Learning, and Education for Democracy. The framework celebrates education that develops citizens who care for others and work to build an equitable society. It is dedicated to educational equity and cares for all students. The goals are school reform and closing achievement gaps. Two case studies demonstrate how teachers operationalize the principles by caring for students and helping them achieve academic success and career goals.
MULTICULTURALISM ART EDUCATION: A MALAYSIAN PERSPEKTIVEukhtihanaz
The document discusses multiculturalism in art education from a Malaysian perspective. It argues that art is a powerful way to shape attitudes and behaviors, and that art education can build understanding between students from different cultural backgrounds. The author examines how Malaysian art education aims to promote cultural awareness and develop a united, culturally diverse society through its curriculum.
This is a multicultural in Education PowerPoint presentation, this power point helps the readers to understand what multicultural mean it is, how its added into the subject area of teaching, and how diversity is managed in and outside of class room by exercising multicultural education
Social Foundations Of Multicultural EducationAmanda Gray
The history of multicultural education in the US is rooted in the civil rights movement of the 1950s-1970s which aimed to provide equal education for all students regardless of race. As the US population became more culturally and ethnically diverse in the late 20th century, multicultural education emerged to prepare students for an increasingly diverse society and develop their intercultural skills. However, early implementations of multicultural education focused more on surface level aspects like ethnic holidays rather than systemic reform. True multicultural education requires examining all aspects of schooling from policies to teaching methods.
This document discusses culture, teaching, and learning. It defines culture as representing characteristics like language, customs, food, and holidays that are attributable to distinct groups of people. One goal of studying these topics is to provide educators a better understanding of culture so they can apply it effectively in teaching. The document examines different approaches to understanding culture, such as viewing it as traits of groups or as a complex, layered construct. It also discusses how culture is transmitted and adapted through education and enculturation. Schools tend to privilege the cultural capital of dominant groups, potentially reproducing inequalities.
week 7 Challenges in virtual world.pptxJOANESIERAS1
This document discusses current challenges in media literacy education. It covers topics such as how learning is changing due to increased mediation; the history of media education concerns around commercialization of children's media and impacts on learning; evolving conceptions of literacy to include multimodal meanings; key concepts for analyzing media like production, texts, reception; characteristics of new media environments; and changes to young people's media experiences and culture. It concludes with seven challenges facing media education around issues like participation versus protection, linking literacies, connecting to human rights, and realizing democratic goals.
This document summarizes Marquita L. Byrd's theory of Multicultural Communication (MCC). MCC aims to provide a conceptual framework to guide research, pedagogy, and practice of communication within multicultural societies. It addresses limitations of existing intercultural frameworks for understanding communication among diverse groups living within the same nation. MCC defines multicultural communication as occurring within a shared geo-political system and is informed by theories including critical race theory, intersectionality, and multiculturalism. The theory is intended to increase understanding of power dynamics and social identities that shape communication among diverse populations within a nation.
This document summarizes Marquita L. Byrd's theory of Multicultural Communication (MCC). MCC aims to provide a conceptual framework to guide research, pedagogy, and practice of communication within multicultural societies. It addresses limitations of existing intercultural frameworks for understanding communication among diverse groups coexisting within the same nation. MCC defines key terms, assumptions, and questions to guide future research on power dynamics, identity, attitudes and relationships between cultural groups communicating within shared national contexts.
The document discusses developing an online collaborative learning community to improve ethnic and racial students' academic achievement through a digital curriculum. The digital curriculum would be delivered using learning technologies like LectureShare, Second Life, ePals and Quizlet. It would aim to enhance students' language skills and social engagement. Evaluating students' performance, parent interviews and surveys would measure the program's success in addressing the challenges of cultural and language diversity in education.
Integrating global issues in genre based approachTitik Winarti
1) The document discusses introducing culture into the EFL (English as a foreign language) classroom through a genre-based approach and integrating global issues.
2) It explains that culture and language are intertwined and students need linguistic and intercultural competence. A genre-based approach categorizes texts into seven genres like narratives and reports.
3) Integrating global issues can enhance students' language skills while providing knowledge to address world problems in an interdependent world. Teachers should foster cultural awareness and tolerance between diverse cultures.
This document discusses the challenges of writing an essay on multicultural education. It notes that the topic requires a deep understanding of various cultural perspectives, educational systems, and social dynamics. It also requires navigating diverse cultural influences that have shaped educational ideologies over time, as well as examining contemporary issues and debates. Addressing potential conflicts in multicultural education demands considering different viewpoints while fostering inclusivity. The essay writing process itself presents challenges in skillfully organizing information and engaging the reader on this complex topic.
INTRODUCTION:
Whenever two or more people come together with a shared purpose, they form a culture with its own written and unwritten rules for behavior. Our families, workplaces, and communities all have cultures. These cultures have a tremendous, though rarely recognized, impact upon our behavior as individuals.
Each cultural environment provides a set of standards to which we must adapt. Our behavioral patterns change dramatically from one cultural context to another. We are expected to behave in accordance with our cultures, but if we choose not to go along, we must be prepared for the consequences. When we select goals for ourselves that violate the culture, we must either change the culture or endure a never- ending struggle.
Changes in culture that are initiated by a group need cultural support of the members of the group, or else they will not last long. A supportive cultural environment is needed for a lasting change.
El pensamiento liberador basado en las propuestas de Paulo Freire, Simón Rodríguez y Prieto Figueroa en el marco del plan de la patria. Propone una educación que crítica, constructivista en la formación del dominio de una lengua extranjera (este caso el inglés), valorando los aspectos inherentes socio-culturales de toda lengua y adaptarlos a las presentes necesidades educativa como lo es el aprendizaje mixto, a distancia y el virtual interactivo.
The document discusses the history and development of Media Studies as a subject in schools. It traces how Media Studies evolved from being seen as a way to "inoculate" students against the harmful influences of mass media, to an approach that analyzed media texts using theoretical frameworks to understand construction and representation. It also notes how the subject incorporated both analyzing media critically and allowing students to construct their own media. The document argues Media Studies in schools should take a broad, diverse approach incorporating both theory and practice.
Douglas kellner media literacies and critical pedagogy in a multicultural society
1. Media Literacies and Critical Pedagogy in a
Multicultural Society
by
Douglas Kellner
A large number of educators and theorists recognize the ubiquity of media culture in
contemporary society, the growing trends toward multicultural education, and the need
for media literacy that addresses the issue of multicultural difference. There is growing
recognition that media representations help construct our images and understanding of
the world and that education must meet the dual challenges of teaching media literacy in
a multicultural society and sensitizing students and publics to the inequities and injustices
of a society based on gender, race, and class inequalities and discrimination. Recent
critical studies see the role of mainstream media in exacerbating these inequalities and
the ways that media education and the production of alternative media can promote a
healthy multiculturalism of diversity and more robust democracy. They thus confront
some of the most serious challenges and problems that face us as educators and citizens
as we move toward the twenty-first century.
In this paper, I first discuss how critical pedagogy can promote multicultural education
and sensitivity to cultural difference, and then focus on the importance of a wide range of
types of critical literacy to deal with the challenges of the cultural and technological
revolution that we are currently involved in. Such concerns are part of a critical pedagogy
which challenges educators, students, and citizens to rethink established curricula and
teaching strategies to meet the challenge of confronting and dissecting cultural
representation in our increasing multicultural and technological society. The project
involves teaching the skills that will empower citizens and students to become sensitive
to the politics of representations of race, ethnicity, gender, class, and other cultural
differences in order to empower individuals and promote democratization. My argument
is that education today needs to foster a variety of new types of literacy to empower
students and to make education relevant to the challenges of the present and future. My
assumption is that new technologies are altering every aspect of our society and we need
to understand and make use of them both to understand and transform our world.
Multiculturalism and Media Pedagogy
A recent reader Shared Differences demonstrates how media of cultural representation
such as film, video, photography, and multimedia can be used to promote multicultural
education (Carson and Friedman 1995). The text opens with a statement by co-editor
Diane Carson that a sense of urgency concerning America's increasingly multicultural
society drove her and Lester Friedman to investigate how multicultural education can
help us invigorate education for the contemporary era: "A teacher's inclusion of
1
2. multicultural pedagogy and an active engagement with diverse ethnic, racial, and national
issues is critical to America's social well-being... We must put our beliefs into practice,
aware that the defining characteristics and enabling understanding of ethnic, racial, and
national groups can and ought to be taught. Teachers must acknowledge uniqueness and
difference as they also applaud similarity, for the strength of small communities and also
society at large derives from celebrating our diversity" (ix).
Carson expands her pitch for multicultural education as a response to deal creatively
with growing diversity, which facilitates "strategies for sharing, understanding, and
enjoying" our proliferating cultural multiplicities and differences (x). She urges
developing strategies for action, that will promote multicultural understanding, that will
empower students, and that will strengthen education. Carson's and Friedman's dual
project is to argue that the issues of multiculturalism are central to academic disciplines
from literature to anthropology, and that media pedagogy can serve to promote the goals
of multicultural education and critical media literacy. They accordingly assemble a broad
array of studies by teachers who use media technology to promote multiculturalism in a
number of disciplines in two and four year colleges. Each of their 14 contributors outlines
course goals, discusses how they use media and media education to promote these goals,
and analyzes their course experiences. Each also presents the syllabus used in the course
to provide practical models of how to organize courses in multicultural education and
media pedagogy.
The result is a very useful collection of models of practical criticism that will enable
teachers in various fields to use media education to promote goals internal to their
discipline. On the whole, the collection advances the social goals of making teachers and
students sensitive to the politics of representation, to how media audiences' images of
race, gender, sexuality, and cultural differences are in part generated by cultural
representations, how negative stereotyping presents harmful cultural images, and the need
for a diversity of representations to capture the cultural wealth of contemporary America.
Teachers can gain insight into how media can serve their pedagogical goals and how they
can both use media to promote multicultural education and to use this material to teach
media literacy as well.
Following Carson's Preface and overview of the project, the collection opens with an
essay by co-editor Lester Friedman, "Struggling for America's Soul: A Search for Some
Common Ground in the Multicultural Debate." Friedman notes the current conflicts over
multiculturalism in American society and the debates over multicultural education in the
academic world. In this contentious and conflicted terrain, he suggests, we must seek
common ground, to articulate what unites as well as divides us, and come to appreciate
our commonalties as well as our differences. Indeed, the rancor in some of the education
wars over curricula, pedagogy, and education in general are part and parcel of broader
cultural wars between competing groups and ideologies fighting over the future of U.S.
society and culture. Since educational debates are often intimately connected with
political struggles, it is necessary to articulate clearly the different positions within the
debates and if possible and appropriate to seek a common ground for consensus.
2
3. Indeed, I have long believed that there is no necessary conflict between traditional and
multicultural education, that the education process is strengthened with the incorporation
of voices, viewpoints, and perspectives excluded from traditional canons, and that
multicultural curricula, deployed wisely, can improve many academic courses. Friedman
attempts to articulate some principles that would enable multicultural education to enrich
rather than replace the traditional curriculum and that would provide a common ground
for both traditionalists and multiculturalists to rethink education. Reaching a common and
higher ground in the debates over education require, in Friedman's view: acknowledging
that while knowledge is constructed and transmitted from specific locations that
"knowledgeable, well-trained teachers can generate discussions about cultures other than
their own," (3). For Friedman this entails accepting that multicultural curricula need not
"be taught only, or even primarily, to members of ethnic minorities," nor that "one
monocultural approach (e.g., Eurocentrism) [be replaced] with another monocultural
methodology (e.g., Afrocentrism)" (3).
If multicultural education is to promote genuine diversity and expand the curriculum, it is
important both for groups excluded from mainstream education to learn about their own
heritage and for dominant groups to explore the experiences and voices of minority and
excluded groups. Moreover, as Friedman stresses, while it is important and useful to
study cultures and voices excluded from traditional canons, dead white European male
authors may have as much of importance to teach all students as excluded representatives
of minority groups whom multiculturalists want, often with good reason, to include in the
curriculum. Thus, Friedman convincingly argues that: "Western culture, despite its
myriad faults, remains a crucial influence on American political, intellectual and social
thought and, as such, should play an important role in classrooms" (3).
Indeed, few advocates of multicultural education call for jettisoning the traditional canon
and altogether replacing the classics with new multicultural fare. Genuine multicultural
education requires expanding, not contracting, the curricula, broadening and enriching it,
not impoverishing it. It also involves, as Friedman stresses, including white ethnic groups
in the multicultural spectrum and searching out those common values and ideals that cut
across racial and cultural boundaries. Thus, multicultural education can both help us
understand our history and culture, and can move toward producing a more diverse and
inclusive democratic society.
Shared Differences suggests how multicultural education can be used to enrich the
subject matter of many traditional disciplines, ranging from literature to anthropology. In
addition, traditional disciplines and texts can themselves be taken as the topic of critical
scrutiny and inquiry, and can thus be used to promote the pedagogical goals of
developing sensitivity to cultural difference. The emphasis in the reader is on using a
medley of media material to present aspects and effects of the politics of representation
from a variety of perspectives. Thus, an anthropologist discusses how media culture can
be used to teach ethnography and cultural critique which is sensitive to cultural
representation and difference (Michael M.J. Fischer); writing teachers present a course
dedicated to writing about literature and various forms of popular media which helps
make students aware of the forms of cultural rhetoric and difference (Margaret Himley
3
4. and Delia C. Temes); an English professor (Linda Dittmar) discusses how the English
curriculum can be transformed by the addition of film and media culture; a public health
professor (Clarence Spigner) discusses how negative media representations can
contribute to problems of health and social well-being; and historian Carlos E. Cortes
discusses how media education can contribute to better historical understanding and
socio-political sensitivity.
These studies provide a variety of arguments for the importance of including media texts
in the curricula and how using and studying the media can advance the aims of a variety
of pedagogic practices. The teaching of writing, for example, as Himley and Temes
stress, is enhanced by engaging students in analyzing cultural rhetoric and difference in
various domains of social discourses. Print journalism, film, television, photographic
images, advertising, and political rhetoric are all forms of writing, all cultural texts that
influence how we see the world, and the practice of critically dissecting these writings
helps us to see how all of these cultural forms represent different modes of writing with
their own biases and perspectives. Attending to the representation of difference within the
broader field of society and culture can enable students to avoid manipulation by cultural
rhetorics and to empower students to find their own voices within the cacophony of
competing and conflicting discourses of the present age. Critically dissecting cultural
materials also empowers students to reflect upon their own commonalties and
differences, and to respect their differences from others, while becoming critical of those
who would suppress differences or present some differences (racial, gender, class, etc.)
negatively, stereotypically, and pejoratively.
The authors in Shared Differences thus present arguments legitimating the use of media
materials in a number of disciplines to promote both traditional pedagogic goals (the
transmission of knowledge, the cultivation of reading and writing skills, the mastering of
fields and disciplines), as well as to contribute to the production of a more diverse
democratic polity that appreciates and affirms differences between ethnic, racial, and
cultural groups. On the other hand, many of the teachers who are using multicultural
media as a tool to promote their own disciplines downplay the importance of cultivating
media literacy as an important tool in developing students' critical and analytical skills.
One needs to be aware that each media technology (film, video, photography,
multimedia, and so on) have their own biases, their own formal codes and rules, and that
the ways in which the media themselves construct and communicate meaning needs to be
an explicit focus of awareness and analysis.
Indeed, media culture constructs models of multicultural difference, privileging some
groups, while denigrating others. Grasping the construction of difference and hierarchy in
media texts requires learning how they are constructed, how they communicate, and how
they influence their audiences. Textual analysis of media artifacts helps to reveal their
codes and conventions, their values and ideologies, and thus their meanings and
messages. In particular, a critical cultural studies should analyze representations of class,
gender, race, ethnicity, sexual preference, and other identity markers in the texts of media
culture, as well as attending to national, regional, and other cultural differences, how they
4
5. are articulated in cultural representations, and how these differences among audiences
create different readings and receptions of cultural texts.
On the whole, the contributions to Shared Differences focus on using media to promote
multicultural education and downplay theorizing and developing the skills of media
literacy. Most of the contributors focus on the politics of positive/negative representations
and do not present more complex methods of gaining media literacy, or articulate more
general principles or models. Although many of the practical course curricula and syllabi
present materials for developing media literacy, this topic is not overtly theorized and is
merely mentioned in passing. In the next section, therefore, I will engage a series of
books published over the past decade that contribute to developing a critical pedagogy of
media literacy. The argument for developing such skills as part of standard educational
training is that the media themselves are a form of cultural pedagogy and thus must be
countered by a critical media pedagogy that dissects how media communicate and effect
their audiences and how students and citizens can gain skills to critically analyze the
media.
Media Literacy and the Challenges of Contemporary Education
While Shared Differences focuses on multicultural media pedagogy as a response to the
challenge of developing multicultural education and understanding, a large number of
books on media literacy over the past decade start from the premise of the ubiquity of
media culture in contemporary society and produce a more general argument for critical
media literacy as a response to media bombardment. "Media literacy" involves
knowledge of how media work, how they construct meanings, how they serve as a form
of cultural pedagogy, and how they function in everyday life. A media literate person is
skillful in analyzing media codes and conventions, able to criticize media stereotypes,
values, and ideologies, and thus literate in reading media critically. Media literacy thus
empowers people to use media intelligently, to discriminate and evaluate media content,
to critically dissect media forms, and to investigate media effects and uses.
A critical media literacy is necessary since media culture strongly influences our view of
the world, imparting knowledge of geography, of technology and the environment, of
political and social events, of how the economy works, of what is currently going on in
our society and the world at large. Media entertainment is also a form of cultural
pedagogy, teaching dominant values, ways of thought and behavior, style and fashion,
and providing resources for constituting individual identities (Kellner 1995a). The media
are both crucial sources of knowledge and information and sources of entertainment and
leisure activity. They are our story tellers and entertainers, and are especially influential
since we are often not aware that media narratives and spectacles themselves are a form
of education, imparting cultural knowledge, values, and shaping how we see and live our
social worlds.
Consequently, media literacy is an important part of multicultural education since many
people's conceptions of gender, race, ethnicity, and class are constituted in part by the
media which are often important in determining how people view social groups, conceive
5
6. of gender roles of masculinity and femininity, and distinguish between good and bad,
right and wrong, attitudes and behavior. Since the media also provide role models,
conceptions of proper and improper conduct, and provide crucial cultural and political
information, they are an important form of pedagogy and socialization. A media literate
person is thus able to read, understand, evaluate, discriminate and criticize media
materials, and ultimately, as I shall suggest below, produce media artifacts, in order to
use media as means of expression and communication.
Sometimes "the media" are lumped into one homogeneous category, but it is important
to discern that there are many media of communication and forms of cultural pedagogy,
ranging from print media such as books, newspapers, and magazines to film, radio,
television, popular music, photography, advertising, and many other multimedia cultural
forms, including video games, computer culture, CD-Roms, and the like. Media literacy
thus requires traditional print literacy skills as well as visual literacy, aural literacy, and
the ability to analyze narratives, spectacles, and a wide range of cultural forms. Media
literacy involves reading images critically, interpreting sounds, and seeing how media
texts produce meaning in a multiplicity of ways (Kellner 1989c and 1995a). Since media
are a central part of our cultural experience from childhood to the grave, training in media
literacy should begin early in life and continue into adulthood, as new technologies are
constantly creating new media and new genres, technical innovations, aesthetic forms,
and conventions are constantly emerging.
Len Masterman has been associated with helping inaugurate a media literacy movement
and his book Teaching the Media (1989 [1985]) is frequently cited in the literature on the
topic as a key text. Masterman makes the case that the ubiquity of the media in
transmitting knowledge requires educators from primary schools to post-school to impart
critical knowledge of how the media work, construct meaning, and function in everyday
life. Yet Masterman's focus is on "delineation of a number of general principles for
teaching across the media" (1989: vii i-ix) and he does not really develop a concept or
practical pedagogy of media literacy in his book. Rather, drawing heavily on British
cultural studies, he provides a comprehensive overview of media education, discussing
such topics as media institutions, text and rhetoric, ideology, audiences, and approaches
to media education.
Masterman's text provides a useful general introduction to teaching the media, though
his British-oriented approach might provide blocks to using his book in a North
American setting. Moreover, while a general media literacy may be of some use in
transmitting some general ideas and principles, one needs to develop a media literacy that
is sensitive to the differences among the specific media, engaging students in critically
analyzing and dissecting a wide range of media materials, including such disparate
phenomena as TV news, rock music, action-adventure film, advertising, and multimedia
web sites. Hence, the principle of difference should not only be part of a multicultural
education making students sensitive to social and cultural difference, but one should also
see how different media construct their materials in different ways. One also needs to
construct different forms of media literacy according to the age, interests, needs, and
capacities of specific students. Obviously, teaching media literacy in kindergarten
6
7. through the elementary grades is going to involve different strategies and pedagogy than
teaching media literacy to high school, college, or adult audiences.
Contributions of a critical pedagogy of difference are found in recent contributions to
expanding media literacy by scholars influenced by post-structuralist theory. Allan Luke
and Carmen Luke have pointed to the usefulness of post-structuralist thought in
rethinking education under contemporary conditions (see, inter alia, Luke and Luke
1990). Carmen Luke has shown how difference is often occluded in mainstream media
culture and how cultural studies in the classroom can generate alternative readings and
critically valorize difference. In turn, Allan Luke has shown how a post-structuralist-
inspired discourse analysis can help dissect the construction of difference in cultural texts
and be an important instrument in a critical pedagogy (forthcoming).
Although we are moving into an increasingly global media culture, critical media
pedagogy should probably engage in classroom instruction media and cultural material
familiar to students in different countries and parts of the world. In the 1990s, for
instance, a series of books have been published in the United States dealing with various
dimensions of media literacy and education which engages North American media
material. Thus, whereas earlier cultural studies and models of media literacy often
engaged material from English and Australian contexts that were not always accessible to
individuals in the North American context, there is now a burgeoning tradition of cultural
studies engaging material from a variety of cultures, ranging from the United States to
Taiwan, in what might be seen as the globalization of cultural studies. Thus, whereas
John Fiske's earlier works primarily dealt with the English and Australian materials and
the contexts in which he was himself living, teaching, and researching, his more recent
books focus on North American media culture and contexts, reflecting his new domicile
(Fiske 1993, 1994). Henry Giroux (1992, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997), Peter McLaren (1995,
1996), and others have linked cultural studies with critical pedagogy and systematically
elaborated theoretical principles and models, while carrying out practical studies of
contemporary media culture. In all of these cases, the issue of multiculturalism and the
analysis of gender, race, and class in terms of the politics of representation and audience
reception are stressed. Similar emphases are also found in the cultural studies of
Grossberg (1992), Kellner and Ryan (1988), Kellner (1990, 1992, and 1995), and a
number of other works in North American cultural studies (see the collections edited by
Grossberg, Nelson, and Treichler 1992; Giroux and McLaren 1994; and Dines and
Humez 1995).
Other note-worthy attempts to develop a critical pedagogy focusing on cultivating media
literacy and multicultural education include the work of James Schwoch, Mimi White,
and Susan Reilly (1992) who recognize that the media are a form of pedagogy which
construct social knowledge and requires critical dissection of its mode of teaching. The
authors demonstrate how media images, discourse, symbols, and narratives constitute
social meanings and subjectivities. Critically scrutinizing the dominant forms of media
culture, the authors develop a critical pedagogy of representation that dissects the values,
meanings, and ideologies constructed in media texts. Combining analysis of
news/information and entertainment, the authors see "media as perpetual pedagogy" and
7
8. provide critical insights into the sort of pedagogy provided by mainstream media while
providing a counterpedagogy of their own.
In the same critical spirit, David Sholle and Stan Denski discuss media education and the
(re)production of culture, critically analyzing the social production of knowledge through
mass media of communication and proclaiming the need for a critical pedagogy that
criticizes its limitations, distortions, and biases. The authors stress the importance of
building bridges across disciplines, using theory to connect media education with the
empowerment of students and the promotion of radical democracy. Combining the
critical theory of the Frankfurt school with British cultural studies, feminism, and
postmodern theory, Sholle and Denski call for contextualizing education within the
framework of its functions in U.S. society, and they connect critical pedagogy and media
education with transformative practice and the goal of producing a more democratic
society.
In addition, Sholle, Susan Reilly, Peter McLaren, and Rhonda Hammer have published a
co-authored text Rethinking Media Literacy (1995) which provide theoretical models of
critical media literacy, practical studies that exemplify the project, and attempts to
develop the literacies that will help make possible more critical and empowerment
students and citizens. In particular, Hammer indicates how student video projects can
empower students to learn the conventions and techniques of media production and use
the media to advance their own aims. Whereas film production involves heavy capital
investment, expensive technology, and thus restricts access, video production is more
accessible to students, easier to use, and enables a broad spectrum of students to actually
produce media texts, providing alternative modes of expression and communication.
Video technology thus provides access to a large number of voices excluded from
cultural production and expression, materializing the multicultural dream of democratic
culture as a dialogue of a rainbow of voices, visions, ideas, and experiences.
The books that I have discussed all address the issue of promoting multiculturalism and
media literacy on a University level. They are geared for the most part to college
undergraduate and even graduate teaching and thus are on a fairly high level of
sophistication. Yet one could argue that multicultural and media literacy should be taught
at all stages of education, that it is extremely important to begin teaching multiculturalism
and media literacy at early levels. Moreover, I would suggest that media material can be
especially valuable in teaching multiculturalism and positive social values to young
children, in view of the important role of media culture in their lives. There are indeed
associations, groups, and texts that are oriented toward teaching multicultural education
and media literacy to younger students. Survey of this vastly expanding material goes
beyond the limits of this study, and here I merely want to mention the scope of
importance of teaching media literacy and multiculturalism on all levels from
kindergarten through graduate school and beyond. We live in a world of media and new
technologies, and our social world is increasingly multicultural, providing new
opportunities to enjoy richness and diversity, but also producing new social conflicts and
problems.
8
9. It is the challenge of education and educators to devise strategies to teach media literacy
while using media materials to contribute to advancing multicultural education. For,
against McLuhan who claims that the younger generation are naturally media literate
(1964), I would argue that developing critical media literacy requires cultivating explicit
strategies of cultural pedagogy and models of media education. Yet within educational
circles, there is a debate over what constitutes the field of media pedagogy, with different
agendas and programs. A traditionalist "protectionist" approach would attempt to
"inoculate" young people against the effects of media addiction and manipulation by
cultivating a taste for book literacy, high culture, and the values of truth, beauty, and
justice. Neil Postman in his books Amusing Ourselves to Death (1985) and Technopolis
(1992) exemplifies this approach.
A "media literacy" movement, by contrast, attempts to teach students to read, analyze,
and decode media texts, in a fashion parallel to the cultivation of print literacy. Media
arts education in turn teaches students to appreciate the aesthetic qualities of media and to
use various media technologies as tools of self-expression and creation. Critical media
literacy, as I would advocate it, builds on these approaches, analyzing media culture as
products of social production and struggle, and teaching students to be critical of media
representations and discourses, but also stressing the importance of learning to use the
media as modes of self-expression and social activism.
Critical media literacy not only teaches students to learn from media, to resist media
manipulation, and to empower themselves vis-a-vis the media, but it is concerned with
developing skills that will empower citizens and that will make them more motivated and
competent participants in social life. Critical media literacy is thus tied to the project of
radical democracy and concerned to develop skills that will enhance democratization and
participation. Critical media literacy takes a comprehensive approach that would teach
critical skills and how to use media as instruments of social change. The technologies of
communication are becoming more and more accessible to young people and average
citizens, and they should be used to promote education, democratic self-expression, and
social progress. Thus, technologies that could help produce the end of participatory
democracy, by transforming politics into media spectacles and the battle of images, and
by turning spectators into cultural zombies, could also be used to help invigorate
democratic debate and participation (Kellner 1995a and 1995b).
Indeed, teaching critical media literacy should be a participatory, collaborative project.
Students are often more media savvy, knowledgeable, and immersed in media culture
than their teachers and thus can contribute to the educational process through sharing
their ideas, perceptions, and insights. On the other hand, critical discussion, debate, and
analysis should be encouraged with teachers bringing to bear their critical perspectives on
student readings of media material. Since media culture is often part and parcel of
students' identity and most powerful cultural experience, teachers must be sensitive in
criticizing artifacts and perceptions that students hold dear, yet an atmosphere of critical
respect for difference and inquiry into the nature and effects of media culture should be
encouraged.
9
10. Another complexity in developing critical media pedagogy results from the fact that in a
sense it is not a pedagogy in the traditional sense with firmly-established principles, a
canon of texts, and tried-and-true teaching procedures. Critical media pedagogy is in its
infancy, it is just beginning to produce results, and is thus more open and experimental
than established print-oriented pedagogy. Moreover, the material of media culture is so
polymorphous, multivalent, and polysemic, that it requires sensitivity to different
readings, interpretations, perceptions of the complex images, scenes, narratives,
meanings, and message of media culture which in its own ways is as complex and
challenging to critically decipher as book culture.
I have, in fact, so far downplayed hostility toward media education and the media
themselves. Educational traditionalists conceive of literacy in more limited print-media
paradigms and, as I suggested above, often adopt a "protectionist" approach when they
address the issue of the media at all, warning students against corruption, or urging that
they limit media use to "educational" materials. Yet many teachers on all levels from
kindergarten to the University have discovered that media material, judiciously used, can
be valuable in a variety of instructional tasks, helping to make complex subject matter
accessible and engaging. Obviously, media cannot substitute for print material and
classroom teaching, and should be seen as a supplement to traditional materials rather
than a magic panacea for the failures of traditional education. Moreover, as I argue in the
next section, traditional print literacy and competencies are more important than ever in
our new high-tech societies.
It is also highly instructive, I would argue, to teach students at all levels to critically
engage popular media materials, including the most familiar film, television, music, and
other forms of media culture. Yet, here one needs, however, to avoid an uncritical media
populism, of the sort that is emerging within certain sectors of British and North
American cultural studies. In a review of Rethinking Media Literacy (McLaren, Hammer,
Sholle, and Reilly 1995), for instance, Jon Lewis attacked what he saw as the overly
critical postures of the contributors to this volume, arguing: "If the point of a critical
media literacy is to meet students halfway -- to begin to take seriously what they take
seriously, to read what they read, to watch what they watch --teachers must learn to love
pop culture" (1996: 26). Note the authoritarian injunction that "teachers must learn to
love popular culture" (italics are Lewis'), followed by an attack on more critical
approaches to media literacy.
Teaching critical media literacy, however, involves occupation of a site above the
dichotomy of fandom and censor. One can teach how media culture provides significant
statements or insights about the social world, positive visions of gender, race, and class,
or complex aesthetic structures and practices, thus putting a positive spin on how it can
provide significant contributions to education. Yet one should also indicate how media
culture can promote sexism, racism, ethnocentrism, and other forms of prejudice, as well
as misinformation, problematic ideologies, and questionable values. A more dialectical
approach to media literacy engages students' interests and concerns, and should, as I
suggested above, involve a collaborative approach between teachers and students since
students are deeply absorbed in media culture and may know more about some of its
10
11. artifacts and domains than their teachers. Consequently, they should be encouraged to
speak, discuss, and intervene in the teaching/learning process. This is not to say that
media literacy training should romanticize student views, however, that may be
superficial, mistaken, uniformed, and full of various problematical biases. Yet exercises
in media literacy can often productively involve intense student participation in a mutual
learning process where both teachers and students together learn media literacy skills and
competencies.
It is also probably a mistake to attempt to institute a top-down program of media literacy
imposed from above on teachers, with fixed texts, curricula, and prescribed materials.
Teachers and students will have very different interests and concerns, and will naturally
emphasize different subject matter and choose examples relevant to their own and their
student interests. Courses in critical media literacy should thus be flexible enough to
enable teachers and students to constitute their own curricula to engage material and
topics of current concern, and to address their own interests. Moreover, and, crucially,
educators should discern that we are in the midst of one of the most intense technological
revolutions in history and must learn to adapt new computer technologies to education, as
I suggest in the following section.
New Technologies, Multiple Literacies, and Postmodern Pedagogy: The
New Frontier
The studies on multicultural education and critical media literacy that I have examined
up to this point neglect to interrogate computer culture and the ways that the Internet and
new computer technologies and cultural forms are dramatically transforming the
circulation of information, images, and various modes of culture. And so in this
concluding section that is looking toward education in the next century, I want to argue
that students should learn new forms of computer literacy that involve both how to use
computer culture to do research and gather information, as well as to perceive it as a
cultural terrain which contains texts, spectacles, games, and interactive media. Moreover,
computer culture is a discursive and political location in which they can intervene,
engaging in discussion groups, creating their web sites, and producing new multimedia
for cultural dissemination. Computer culture enables individuals to actively participate in
the production of culture, ranging from discussion of public issues to creation of their
own cultural forms.
It is indeed a salient fact of the present age that computer culture is proliferating and so
we have to begin teaching computer literacy as well from an early age on. Computer
literacy, however, itself needs to be theorized. Often the term is synonymous with
technical ability to use computers, to master existing programs, and maybe engage in
some programming oneself. I want, however, to suggest expanding the conception of
computer literacy from using computer programs and hardware to developing, in
addition, more sophisticated abilities in traditional reading and writing, as well as the
ability to critically dissect cultural forms taught as part of critical media literacy. Thus, on
this conception, genuine computer literacy involves not just technical knowledge and
skills, but refined reading, writing, and communicating ability that involves heightened
11
12. capacities for critically analyzing, interpreting, and processing print, image, sound, and
multimedia material. Computer literacy involves heightened abilities to read, to scan texts
and information, to put together in meaningful patterns mosaics of information, to
construct meanings and significance, to contextualize and evaluate, and to discuss and
articulate one's own views.
Thus, in my expanded conception, computer literacy involves technical abilities
concerning developing basic typing skills, using computer programs, accessing
information, and using computer technologies for a variety of purposes ranging from
verbal communication to artistic expression. There are ever more implosions between
media and computer culture as audio and video material becomes part of the Internet, as
CD-Rom and multimedia develop, and as new technologies become part and parcel of the
home, school, and workplace. Therefore, the skills of decoding images, sounds, and
spectacle learned in critical media literacy training can also be valuable as part of
computer literacy as well. Furthermore, print literacy takes on increasing importance in
computer world as one needs to critically scrutinize and scroll tremendous amounts of
information, putting new emphasis on developing reading and writing abilities. Indeed,
Internet discussion groups, chat rooms, email, and various forums require writing skills in
which a new emphasis on the importance of clarity and precision is emerging as
communications proliferate. In this context of information saturation, it becomes an
ethical imperative not to contribute to cultural and information overload, and to concisely
communicate one's thoughts and feelings.
In a certain sense, computers are becoming the technological equivalent of Hegel's
Absolute Idea, able to absorb everything into its form and medium. Indeed, computers are
now not only repositories of text and print-based data, but also contain a wealth of
images, multimedia sights and sounds, and interactive environments that, like the media,
are themselves a form of education that require a critical pedagogy of electronic,
digitized, culture and communication. From this conception, computer literacy is
something like a Hegelian synthesis of print and visual literacy, technical skills, and
media literacies, brought together at a new and higher stage. While Postman and others
produce a simplistic Manichean dichotomy between print and visual literacy, we need to
learn to think dialectically, to read text and image, to decipher sight and sound, and to
develop forms of computer literacy adequate to meet the challenges of an increasingly
high tech society.
Thus, a postmodern pedagogy requires developing critical forms of print, media, and
computer literacy, all of crucial importance in the new technoculture of the present and
fast-approaching future. Whereas modern pedagogy tended to be specialized, fragmented,
and differentiated and was focused on print culture, a postmodern pedagogy involves
developing multiple literacies and critically analyzing, dissecting, and engaging a
multiplicity of cultural forms, some of which are the products of new technologies and
require developing new literacies to engage the new cultural forms and media. Indeed,
contemporary culture is marked by a proliferation of image machines which generate a
panoply of print, sound, environmental, and diverse aesthetic artifacts within which we
wander, trying to make our way through this forest of symbols. And so we need to begin
12
13. learning how to read these images, these fascinating and seductive cultural forms whose
massive impact on our lives we have only begun to understand. Surely, education should
attend to the new image culture and teach how to read images and narratives as part of
media/computer/technoculture literacy. Such an effort would be part of a new critical
pedagogy that attempts to critically empower individuals so that they can analyze and
criticize the emerging technoculture, as well as participate in its cultural forums and sites.
Moreover, in addition to the critical media literacy, print literacy, and computer literacy,
discussed above, multiple literacies involve cultural literacy, social literacy, and
ecoliteracy. Since a multicultural society is the context of education in the contemporary
moment, new forms of social interaction and cultural awareness are needed that
appreciate differences, multiplicity, and diversity. Therefore, expanded social and
cultural literacy is needed that appreciates the cultural heritage, histories, and
contributions of a diversity of groups. Thus, whereas one can agree with E.D. Hirsch
(1987) that we need to be literate in our shared cultural heritage, we also need to become
culturally literate in cultures that have been hitherto invisible, as Henry Louis Gates and
his colleagues have been arguing in their proposals for a multicultural education.
Social literacy should also be taught throughout the educational systems, ranging from
focus on how to relate and get along with a variety of individuals, how to negotiate
differences, how to resolve conflicts, and how to communicate and socially interact in a
diversity of situations. Social literacy also involves ethical training in values and norms,
delineating proper and improper individual and social values. It also requires knowledge
of the contemporary societies and thus overlaps with social and natural science training.
Indeed, given the tremendous role of science and technology in the contemporary world,
given the threats to the environment, and need to preserve and enhance the natural as well
as social and cultural worlds, it is scandalous how illiterate the entire society is
concerning science, nature, and even our own bodies. An ecoliteracy should thus
appropriately teach competency in interpreting and interacting with our natural
environment, ranging from our own body to natural habitats like forests and deserts.
The challenge for education today is thus to promote multiple literacies to empower
students and citizens to use the new technologies to enhance their lives and create a better
culture and society based on respect for multicultural difference and aiming at fuller
democratic participation of individuals and groups largely excluded from wealth and
power in the previous modern society. A positive postmodernity would thus involve
creation of a more egalitarian and democratic society in which more individuals and
groups were empowered to participate. The great danger facing us, of course, is that the
new technologies will increase the current inequalities based on class, gender, and racial
divisions. So far, the privileged groups have had more immediate access to the new
technologies. It is therefore a challenge of education today to provide access to the new
technologies and the literacies needed for competence in order to overcome some of the
divisions and inequalities that have plagued contemporary societies during the entire
modern age.
13
14. Yet, there is also the danger that youth will become totally immersed in a new world of
high-tech experience and lose its social connectedness and ability to communicate and
relate concretely to other people. Statistics suggest that more and more sectors of youth
are able to access cyberspace and that college students with Internet accounts are
spending as much as four hours a day in the new realm of technological experience. The
media, however, has been generating a moral panic concerning allegedly growing
dangers in cyberspace with lurid stories of young boys and girls lured into dangerous sex
or running away from home, endless accounts of how pornography on the Internet is
proliferating, and the publicizing of calls for increasing control, censorship, and
surveillance of communication -- usually by politicians who are computer illiterate. The
solution, however, is not to ban access to new technologies, but to teach students and
citizens how to use these technologies so that they can be used for productive and
creative rather than problematical ends.
To be sure, there are dangers in cyberspace as well as elsewhere, but the threats to
adolescents are significantly higher through the danger of family violence and abuse than
seduction by strangers on the Internet. And while there is a flourishing trade in
pornography on the Internet, this material has become increasingly available in a variety
of venues from the local video shop to the newspaper stand, so it seems unfair to
demonize the Internet. Thus, attempts at Internet censorship are part of the attack on
youth which would circumscribe their rights to obtain entertainment and information, and
create their own subcultures. Consequently, devices like the V-chip that would exclude
sex and violence on television, or block computer access to objectionable material, is
more an expression of adult hysteria and moral panic than genuine dangers to youth
which certainly exist, but much more strikingly in the real world than in the sphere of
hyperreality.
New technologies are always demonized and in studying the exploding array of
discourses which characterize the new technologies, I am rather bemused by the extent to
whether they expose either a technophilic discourse which presents new technologies as
our salvation, that will solve all our problems, or they embody a technophobic discourse
that sees technology as our damnation, demonizing it as the major source of all our
problems (Kellner, forthcoming). It appears that similarly one-sided and contrasting
discourses greeted the introduction of other new technologies this century, often
hysterically. To some extent, this was historically the case with film, radio, TV, and now
computers. Film, for instance, was celebrated by early theorists as providing new
documentary depiction of reality, even redemption of reality, a new art form, new modes
of mass education and entertainment -- as well as demonized for promoting sexual
promiscuity, juvenile delinquency and crime, violence, and copious other forms of
immorality. Its demonization led in the United States to a Production Code that
rigorously regulated the content of Hollywood film from 1934 until the 1950s and 1960s
-- no open mouthed kissing was permitted, crime could not pay, drug use or attacks on
religion could not be portrayed, and a censorship office rigorously surveyed all films to
make sure that no subversive or illicit content emerged (Kellner 1997).
14
15. Similar extreme hopes and fears were projected onto radio, television, and now
computers. It appears whenever there are new technologies, people project all sorts of
fantasies, fears, hopes, and dreams onto them, and I believe that this is now happening
with computers and new multimedia technologies. It is indeed striking that if one looks at
the literature on new technologies -- and especially computers -- it is either highly
celebatory and technophilic, or sharply derogatory and technophobic. A critical theory of
technology, however, and critical pedagogy, should avoid either demonizing or deifying
the new technologies and should inside develop pedagogies that will help us use the
technologies to enhance education and life, and to criticize the limitations and false
promises made on behalf of new technologies.
Indeed, there is no doubt that the cyberspace of computer worlds contains as much
banality and stupidity as real life and one can waste much time in useless activity. But
compared to the bleak and violent urban worlds portrayed in rap music and youth films
like Kids (1995), the technological worlds are havens of information, entertainment,
interaction, and connection where youth can gain valuable skills, knowledge, and power
necessary to survive the postmodern adventure. Youth can create new, more multiple and
flexible selves in cyberspace as well as new subcultures and communities. Indeed, it is
exciting to cruise the Internet and to discover how many interesting Web sites that young
people and others have established, often containing valuable educational material. There
is, of course, the danger that corporate and commercial interests will come to colonize the
Internet, but it is likely that there will continue to be spaces where individuals can
empower themselves and create their own communities and identities. A main challenge
for youth (and others) is to learn to use the Internet for positive cultural and political
projects, rather than just entertainment and passive consumption.
Reflecting on the growing social importance of computers and new technologies makes
it clear that it is of essential importance for youth today to gain various kinds of literacy
to empower themselves for the emerging new cybersociety (this is true of teachers and
adults as well). To survive in a postmodern world, individuals of all ages need to gain
skills of media and computer literacy to enable ourselves to negotiate the overload of
media images and spectacles; we all need to learn technological skills to use the new
media and computer technologies to subsist in the new high-tech economy and to form
our own cultures and communities; and youth especially need street smarts and survival
skills to cope with the drugs, violence, and uncertainty in today's predatory culture
(McLaren 1995).
It is therefore extremely important for the future of democracy to make sure that youth of
all classes, races, genders, and regions gain access to new technology, receiving training
in media and computer literacy skills in order to provide the opportunities to enter the
high-tech job market and society of the future, and to prevent an exacerbation of class,
gender, and race inequalities. And while multiple forms of new literacies will be
necessary, traditional print literacy skills are all the more important in a cyberage of
word-processing, information gathering, and Internet communication. Moreover, what I
am calling multiple literacy involves training in philosophy, ethics, value thinking, and
the humanities which I would argue is necessary now more then ever. Indeed, how the
15
16. Internet and new technologies will be used depends on the overall education of youth and
the skills and interests they bring to the new technologies which can be used to access
educational and valuable cultural material, or pornography and the banal wares of
cybershopping malls.
Thus, the concept of multiple literacy and the postmodern pedagogy that I envisage
would argue that it is not a question of either/or, e.g. either print literacy or media
literacy, either the classical curriculum or new curricula, but a question of both/and that
preserves the best from classical education, that enhances emphasis on print literacy, but
that also develops new literacies to engage the new technologies. Obviously, cyberlife is
just one dimension of experience and one still needs to learn to interact in a "real world"
of school, jobs, relationships, politics, and other people. Youth -- indeed all of us! --
needs to learn to interact in many dimensions of social reality and to gain a multiplicity of
forms of literacy and skills that will enable us to create identities, relationships, and
communities that will nurture and develop our full spectrum of potentialities and satisfy a
wide array of needs. Our lives are more multidimensional than ever and part of the
postmodern adventure is learning to live in a variety of social spaces and to adapt to
intense change and transformation. Education too must meet these challenges and both
use new technologies to promote education and devise strategies in which new
technologies can be used to create a more democratic and egalitarian multicultural
society.
Dec 1997
References
Carson, Diane, and Lester D. Friedman (1995) Shared Differences. Multicultural Media
& Practical Pedagogy. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press.
Dines, Gail, and Jean Humez (1995), editors, Gender, Race, and Class in Media.
Thousand Oaks, Ca. and London: Sage.
Fiske, John (1993) Power Plays. Power Works. New York and London: Verso.
__________ (1994) Media Matters. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Fleming, Dan (1993) Media Teaching. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
Giroux, Henry (1992) Border Crossing. New York: Routledge.
_____________ (1993) Living Dangerously. Multiculturalism and the Politics of
Difference. New York: Peter Lang.
___________ (1994) Disturbing Pleasures. New York: Routledge.
16
17. __________ (1996) Fugitive Cultures: Race, Violence, and Youth. New York:
Routledge.
____________ (1997) Channel Surfing: Race Talk and the Destruction of Today's
Youth. New York: St. Martin's Press.
Giroux, Henry and Peter McLaren (1994), editors, Between Borders. Pedagogy and the
Politics of Cultural Studies. New York: Routledge.
Grossberg, Lawrence (1992) We Gotta Get Out of this Place. New York and London:
Routledge.
Grossberg, Lawrence, Nelson, Cary and Paula Treichler (1992), editors, Cultural
Studies. New York: Routledge.
Hirsch, E.D. (1987) Cultural Literacy. New York: Random House.
Kellner, Douglas (1989), "Reading Images Critically: Toward a
Postmodern Pedagogy," Journal of Education, Vol. 170, Nr. 3: 31-52.
____________ (1990) Television and the Crisis of Democracy. Boulder, Col: Westview.
___________ (1992) The Persian Gulf TV War. Boulder, Col: Westview.
___________ (1995a) Media Culture. London and New York: Routledge.
_______________ (1995b) "Intellectuals and New Technologies," Media, Culture, and
Society, Vol. 17: 201-217.
_________________ (1997) "Hollywood and Society: Critical Perspectives," in Oxford
Encyclopaedia of Film, edited by John Hill. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
_______________ (forthcoming) "New Technologies, TechnoCities, and the Prospects
for Democratization." In New Technologies and TechnoCities, edited by John Dowling.
London: Sage Books.
Kellner, Douglas and Michael Ryan (1988) Camera Politica: The Politics and Ideology
of Contemporary Hollywood Film. Bloomington, Ind: Indiana University Press.
Lewis, Jon (1996) "Practice What You Preach," Afterimage (Summer 1996): 25-26.
Luke, Allan (forthcoming) "Theory and Practice in Critical Discourse Analysis," in
Internationa,l Encyclopedia of the sociology of education, edited by L. Saha. Eseiver
science Ltd.
17
18. Luke, Carmen (1994) "Media and Cultural Studies," in Constructing Critical Literaciesm
edited by Freedbody, P., Muspratt, A and Luke, A. Norwood, NJ and Sidney: Hampton
Press and Allen and Unwin.
Luke, Carmen and Luke, Allan (1990) "School Knowledge as simulation: Curriculum in
postmodern Conditions," Discourse, Vol. 10, No. 2 (April): 75-91.
Masterman, Len (1989 [1985]) Teaching the Media. London and New York: Routledge.
McLaren, Peter (1995) Critical Pedagogy and Predatory Culture. London and New York:
Routledge.
_____________ (1996) Revolutionary Multiculturalism. London and New York:
Routledge.
McLaren, Peter, Rhonda Hammer, David Sholle and Susan Reilly, (1995) Rethinking
Media Literacy. A Critical Pedagogy of Representation. New York: Peter Lang.
McLuhan, Marshall (1964) Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man. New York:
Signet Books.
Postman, Neil (1985) Amusing Ourselves to Death. New York: Viking-Penquin.
___________ (1992) Technopolis: The Surrender of Culture to Technology. New York:
Random House.
Schwoch, James, Mimi White, and Susan Reilly (1992) Media Knowledge. Albany:
State University of New York Press.
Sholle, David and Stan Denski (1994) Media Education and the (Re)Production of
Culture. Westport, Conn.: Bergin & Garvey.
Back to:
Online Course Materials for 253A: Education, Technology and Society
18