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Multimedia Literacy

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Multimedia literacy



 
 
Multimedia literacy is a new aspect of literacy
Literacy

The traditional definition of literacy is considered to be the ability to read and write, or the ability to use language to Reading , Writing, Listening, and Speech communication....
 that is being recognized as technology expands the way people communicate. The concept of Literacy emerged as a measure of the ability to read and write. In modern context, the word means reading and writing at a level adequate for written communication. A more fundamental meaning is now needed to cope with the numerous media in use, perhaps meaning a level that enables one to successfully function at certain levels of a society.

Multimedia is media
Media (communication)

In communication, media are the data storage device and data transmission tools used to recording and deliver information or data. It is often referred to as synonymous with mass media or news media, but may refer to a single medium used to communicate any data for any purpose....
 that utilizes several different content forms to convey information.






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Multimedia literacy is a new aspect of literacy
Literacy

The traditional definition of literacy is considered to be the ability to read and write, or the ability to use language to Reading , Writing, Listening, and Speech communication....
 that is being recognized as technology expands the way people communicate. The concept of Literacy emerged as a measure of the ability to read and write. In modern context, the word means reading and writing at a level adequate for written communication. A more fundamental meaning is now needed to cope with the numerous media in use, perhaps meaning a level that enables one to successfully function at certain levels of a society.

Multimedia is media
Media (communication)

In communication, media are the data storage device and data transmission tools used to recording and deliver information or data. It is often referred to as synonymous with mass media or news media, but may refer to a single medium used to communicate any data for any purpose....
 that utilizes several different content forms to convey information. Several are already a part of the canon of global communication and publication: (text
Typography

Typography is the art and techniques of typesetting, type design, and modifying type glyphs. Type glyphs are created and modified using a variety of illustration techniques....
, audio
Sound

Sound is vibration transmitted through a solid, liquid, or gas, composed of frequencies within the range of hearing and of a threshold of hearing to be heard, or the sensation stimulated in organs of hearing by such vibrations....
, graphics
Image

An image is an artifact, usually two-dimensional , that has a similar appearance to some subject —usually a physical object or a person....
, animation
Animation

Animation is the rapid display of a sequence of images of 2-D or 3-D artwork or model positions in order to create an illusion of movement. It is an optical illusion of Motion due to the phenomenon of persistence of vision, and can be created and demonstrated in a number of ways....
, video
Video

Video is the technology of electronics Videography, recording, processing, storing, transmitting, and reconstructing a sequence of still images representing Scene in motion....
, and interactivity
Interactivity

In the fields of information science, communication, and industrial design, there is debate over the meaning of Interactivity. In the "contingency view" of interactivity, there are three levels: Noninteractive, when a message is not related to previous messages; Reactive, when a message is related only to one immediately previous message; an...
). Multimedia mainly but not exclusively refers to electronic media
Electronic media

Electronic media are media that utilize electronics or electromechanical energy for the end user to access the content. This is in contrast to static media , which are most often Desktop publishing, but don't require electronics to be accessed by the end user in the printed form....
 because content forms such as audio recordings and video footage
Footage

In film and video, footage is the raw, unedited material as it had been originally recorded by video camera, which usually must be film editing to create a motion picture, video clip, television show or similar completed work....
 are delivered electronically.

Other technologies that involve unique forms of literacy such as virtual reality
Virtual reality

Virtual reality is a technology which allows a user to interact with a computer-simulated environment, whether that environment is a simulation of the real world or an imaginary world....
, computer programming
Computer programming

Computer programming is the process of writing, testing, debugging/troubleshooting, and maintaining the source code of computer programs. This source code is written in a programming language....
 and robotics
Robotics

Robotics is the science and technology of robots, and their design, manufacture, and application. Robotics has connections to electronics, mechanics, and software....
 are possible candidates for future inclusion. With widespread use of computers, the basic literacy of 'reading' and 'writing' are often done via a computer, expanding the foundations of literacy to include multimedia. Computer networks, online communities, and the growing need to communicate with machines, challenge the narrower definitions of literacy.

Definition debate


Critics of the concept of multimedia literacy question whether the term literacy
Literacy

The traditional definition of literacy is considered to be the ability to read and write, or the ability to use language to Reading , Writing, Listening, and Speech communication....
 can be extended beyond its original definition. The word technacy
Technacy

Technacy is the ability to understand, skillfully apply and communicate creative and 'balanced' technological solutions that are based on understanding the contextual factors involved....
 may ultimately be more suitable. Others question whether the 'literacy' skills and concepts in multimedia literacy are new at all, being found in the theatre, film, radio etc. for many years. The expansion of basic literacy through history and across geography provides perspective on those seeking to draw hard lines about what literacy is and is not.

Thousands of years ago, a few early cultures invented the skills and technologies of reading and writing. Many languages today still have no written form. Of those with the invention of writing, only a small percentage of the citizens of these early cultures needed literacy. Each culture and time decides its needed technologies of thought and communication. Those who teach in a society respond to these needs. All societies have relatively recently (in the last 200 years) found that traditional literacy is essential. Not all have achieved it yet. Today there is a very rapid growth in forms of literacy, largely due to the arrival of the personal computer and the internet.

There was a tipping point
Tipping point

In sociology, a tipping point or angle of repose is the event of a previously rare phenomenon becoming rapidly and dramatically more common. The phrase was coined in its sociological use by Morton Grodzins, by analogy with the fact in physics that adding a small amount of weight to a balanced object can cause it to suddenly and completely top...
 in the demand for universal (reading and writing) literacy as an effect of the Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution

The Industrial Revolution was a period in the late 18th and early 19th centuries when major changes in agriculture, manufacturing, production, and transportation had a profound effect on the socioeconomics and cultural conditions in United Kingdom....
. Paper
Paper

Paper is thin material mainly used for writing upon, printing upon or packaging. It is produced by pressing together moist fibers, typically cellulose pulp derived from wood, rags or grasses, and drying them into flexible sheets....
, writing instruments and printing also became much cheaper at about this time. Today there is a revolution in the development of new communication media. There is a demand for literate people to become skilled in the new literacies related to the use of a variety of online tools - blogs, social networking, video and audio sharing and so on. The impact of these internet related media is different from that of the earlier multimedia revolution when film and radio became widespread. These media were powerful, but were largely in the hands of a small number of people with the mass of the population being a passive audience. The new media, particularly those described as Web 2.0
Web 2.0

The term "Web 2.0" refers to a perceived second generation of web development and web design, that aims to facilitate communication, secure information sharing, interoperability, and collaboration on the World Wide Web....
 tools tend to actively involve the users in responding and creating material.

There is considerable debate in progress about the nature and significance of these new media. Traditionalist educators may argue that the long standing media form of text has and will continue to be the foundation of learning. Others will argue that the new forms are displacing the old forms of literacy and that schools must teach the full range of multimedia literacies..

Changing digital technology


As personal computers and their software become more powerful they have the capacity to not only record and edit text, sound, still images, motion pictures and manage interactivity individually, but synthesize all of them onto the same page, screen or viewing, creating new plateaus or forms of composition. Personal computer technology has placed multimedia creation in the hands of any computer user. As multimedia becomes a more prevalent form of communication it is argued that the literacy of 'reading' and 'writing' using multimedia be taught in schools and other education institutions.

The related study of mass media
Mass media

Mass media is a term used to denote a section of the media specifically envisioned and designed to reach a mainstream such as the population of a nation state....
 has long been part of the school program in many school systems either as a separate subject option in secondary schools or more often as a part of general literacy learning. Film Study has also been a school subject in many schools for some time using relatively expensive and complicated equipment to make film or video. The rapid development of multimedia via personal computing means that it is becoming a routine form for a widening group of people not only for just "reading" but for creating the media. The line between mass media and personally authored media is becoming much more blurred if not obliterated. Some non professional authors on the web already have audiences larger than major commercial publications such as major newspapers and TV stations, whether text based blogs or multimedia podcasts. The sudden emergence of short video as a medium for viewing and authoring on sites such as YouTube has illustrated the very rapid rate of change in this area, and the need to learn new forms of literacy

Constructivist learning and multimedia


Multimedia literacy is a subset of the wider issue of the use of ICT (Information and Communication Technology) in schools. While there is widespread recognition that people need to learn how to use computers effectively in order to function in modern society, there is debate about the nature of that learning. Some see it as a simple but lengthy list of technical skills while others see it as also including recognition of the power of ICT to bring about a major change in learning. Avarim and Talmi identify several groups active in ICT in education, including Technocrats
Technocracy (bureaucratic)

Technocracy is a form of government in which engineers, scientists, and other technical experts are in control. Technocracy is a governmental or organizational system where decision makers are selected based upon how highly knowledgeable they are, rather than how much political capital they hold....
, who see the use of ICT as non-problematic and simply a matter of using the new tools, and Reformists, who see ICT as a major and possibly inexorable agent of change in education.

The reformist group see the rapid growth in the use of ICT in schooling occurring in conjunction with the adoption of the constructivist
Constructivism (learning theory)

Constructivism is a psychological theory of knowledge which argues that humans generate knowledge and meaning from their experiences. Constructivism is not a specific pedagogy, although it is often confused with Constructionist_learning, an educational theory developed by Seymour Papert....
 learning theory.(OECD) This theory supports active, hands-on learning. It is related to Cognitive Apprenticeship
Cognitive apprenticeship

Cognitive apprenticeship is a theory of the process where a master of a skill teaches that skill to an apprentice.Constructivist approaches to human learning have led to the development of a theory of cognitive apprenticeship ....
 and the work of Jerome Bruner
Jerome Bruner

Jerome Seymour Bruner is an United States psychologist who has contributed to cognitive psychology and cognitive learning theory in educational psychology and to the general philosophy of education....
.

Some educators see ICT as being a major driver of school reform. This reform is towards a more constructivist
Constructivism (learning theory)

Constructivism is a psychological theory of knowledge which argues that humans generate knowledge and meaning from their experiences. Constructivism is not a specific pedagogy, although it is often confused with Constructionist_learning, an educational theory developed by Seymour Papert....
 approach, using related terms such as: student-centred learning
Student-centred learning

Student-centred learning is an approach to education focusing on the needs of the students, rather than those of others involved in the Education process, such as teachers and administrators....
, Problem-based learning
Problem-based learning

Problem-based learning is a student-centered instructional strategy in which students collaboratively solve problems and reflect on their experiences....
 and experiential education
Experiential education

Experiential education is a philosophy of education that focuses on the transactive process between teacher and student involved in direct experience with the learning environment and content....
. Others point to the slow pace of such reform and suggest that ICT may support reform but it is by no means inevitable that it will do so. (eLearning europa)

Supporters of ICT as a powerful tool for constructivist learning point to its capacity to provide:

  • active and highly motivating engagement with students
  • powerful tools to create text, art, music, sound, models, presentations, movies etc. that produce high quality products and remove much of the tedium normally associated with such creation
  • an error-forgiving environment in which editing of a product fosters learning by trial and error
  • easy communication in text, voice, video
  • quick access to information and resources


Educators are finding, however, that while ICT can provide a technical environment for constructivist learning to occur, there needs to be high quality teaching to develop and sustain an environment that will challenge and inspire students to learn.

Multimedia literacy in schools


Teaching literacy has always been the central business of schools. School literacy teaching had tended to focus on written literacy rather than on oral literacy, which is mainly learnt outside school. Literacy has never been a fixed body of skills but has evolved with the development of technology
Technology

Technology is a broad concept that deals with an animal species' usage and knowledge of tools and crafts, and how it affects an animal species' ability to control and adapt to its Natural environment....
, such as pens and paper, and the needs of society as in the Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution

The Industrial Revolution was a period in the late 18th and early 19th centuries when major changes in agriculture, manufacturing, production, and transportation had a profound effect on the socioeconomics and cultural conditions in United Kingdom....
. For example, handwriting was a major focus of schooling during the 19th Century as the demand for clerks grew rapidly. Then the invention of the typewriter
Typewriter

A typewriter is a Machine or electromechanical device with a set of "keys" that, when pressed, cause Typeface to be printed on a medium, usually paper....
 made neat handwriting a less important business skill. However, important literacy technologies such as the newspaper, the typewriter and the telegraph took decades to spread throughout society, giving schools time to adapt. Schools today are struggling to cope with the teaching of new literacies that are often less than five years old but are widespread in society.

Today the Internet
Internet

The Internet is a global network of interconnected computers, enabling users to share information along multiple channels. Typically, a computer that connects to the Internet can access information from a vast array of available server and other computers by moving information from them to the computer's local memory....
 is a major medium of communication
Communication

Communication is commonly defined as "the imparting or interchange of thoughts, opinions, or information by speech, writing, or signs...",, 1: an act or instance of transmitting and 3 a: "a process by which information is exchanged between individuals through a common system of symbols, signs, or beha...
 and it is increasingly rich in multimedia. Children are regular users of the Internet and educators are recognising the importance of them being 'literate' in its navigation, searching, authentication and other skills. Most school systems in the developed world are including computer literacy
Computer literacy

The term computer literacy is usually attributed to At an April 1972 American Federation of Information Processing Societies conference, Luehrmann gave a talk titled "Should the computer teach the student, or vice-versa." This talk was later published in Robert Taylor's 1980 book, The Computer in the School: Tutor, Tool, Tutee ....
 or similarly named programs, into the curriculum
Curriculum

In formal education, a curriculum is the set of courses, and their content, offered at a school or university. As an idea, curriculum stems from the Latin word for race course, referring to the course of wiktionary:deed and experiences through which children grow and mature in becoming adults....
.

Film director George Lucas
George Lucas

George Walton Lucas, Jr. is an Academy Award-nominated United States film director, film producer, screenwriter and chairman of Lucasfilm Ltd. He is best known for being the creator of the Epic film Sci-Fi franchise Star Wars and the archaeologist-adventurer character Indiana Jones....
 would approve. As he succinctly put it to Elizabeth Daley, dean of USC’s School of Cinema and Television: "In the 21st century, can you honestly tell me that it’s not as important for these students to know as much about Hitchcock
Hitchcock

Hitchcock may refer to people with the surname Hitchcock:* Alfred Hitchcock, film director* Billy Hitchcock* Carol Hitchcock* David Howard Hitchcock , American/Hawaiian artist...
 as they do about Hemingway
Ernest Hemingway

Ernest Miller Hemingway was an American novelist, short story author, and journalist. He was part of the 1920s expatriate community in Paris, France, and one of the veterans of World War I later known as "the Lost Generation"....
? Lucas elaborates on this idea in his conversation with Daley:“.Well . . I began to realize that the potential for multimedia to enhance the learning process was just astronomical. . . . I’m a big proponent of a new kind of grammar that goes beyond words. To tell a story now means grasping a new kind of language, which includes understanding how graphics, color, lines, music and words combine to convey meaning” (Brown 20). In this conversation with Elizabeth Daley, Lucas asks: “Don’t you think that, in the coming decade, students need to be taught to read and write cinematic language, the language of the screen, the language of sound and image, just as they are now taught to read and write text? Otherwise, won’t they be as illiterate as you or I would have been if, on leaving college, we were unable to read and write an essay?”(Daley 15)

Children learn much of their mass media literacy, as recipients, quite intuitively from film, television and radio. However, until recently, few have had the opportunity to experience being multimedia authors. Now, with relatively cheap digital cameras, free software and access to powerful multimedia computers, there is both the opportunity and the need, for quite young students to become authors as well as consumers in the new media.

Lots of free resources are becoming available to school children which both encourage simple story telling and digital literacy. One good example of this is the Inanimate Alice series of online episodes. Music and images are matched to text to stimulate imaginations.

The following sections provides information on skills that students may learn in order to be multimedia literate.

Video

Film making has been a major technology and art form for over a century. Personal video making makes use of many but not all of the techniques of professional film making. Student movie makers need to be familiar with the basic tools and techniques of the art, including familiarity with:

  • camera shots: close up, medium, long shot, pan, fade etc in order to achieve different effects
  • story-boarding: a pictorial frame view of the story line, showing camera views, times and shot sequence which provides the Director with a simple shooting script for a video.
  • editing software replaces tedious and expensive film splicing with digital editing which is quick and forgiving of errors, and allows the insertion of audio tracks in sequence with the video track.
  • sound tracks allow music, sound effects and voice tracks to be added to an existing film (see Sound).
  • the so called Ken Burns
    Ken Burns

    Kenneth Lauren Burns is an United States director and producer of documentary films known for his style of making use of archival footage and photographs....
     Effect, in which the camera pans across a still image allows still images accompanied by a sound track to create quite powerful presentations.


The rise of short videos shared from online services such as YouTube
YouTube

YouTube is a Video hosting service website where users can upload, view and share video clips. Three former PayPal employees created YouTube in February 2005....
 is changing the perception of who makes video and how and why it is viewed. Short and shared online videos have become a major cultural phenomenon in a few years. Their production often breaks most of the 'rules' of how to make video. There technically quality is sometimes low, but their communication impact high.

External Links
  • A detailed overview of steps in authoring digital stories.


Sound

Sound
Most people are very familiar with the use of sound as a powerful tool in television, radio and film, but have little experience in using it themselves. Digital
Digital

A digital system uses discrete values, usually but not always symbolized numerically to represent information for input, processing, transmission, storage, etc....
 recording allows the user much greater opportunity to experiment with the effect of sound features such as:

  • voice tone, pace, pitch
  • music as an influence on mood and atmosphere
  • sound effects that provide enrichment and context to a story.


External Links
  • open source audio editing software.


See also

  • Literacy
    Literacy

    The traditional definition of literacy is considered to be the ability to read and write, or the ability to use language to Reading , Writing, Listening, and Speech communication....
  • Postliterate society
    Postliterate society

    A postliterate society is a hypothetical society wherein multimedia technology has advanced to the point where literacy, the ability to read written words, is no longer necessary....
  • ICT
  • Constructivism (learning theory)
    Constructivism (learning theory)

    Constructivism is a psychological theory of knowledge which argues that humans generate knowledge and meaning from their experiences. Constructivism is not a specific pedagogy, although it is often confused with Constructionist_learning, an educational theory developed by Seymour Papert....
  • Technological literacy
    Technological literacy

    Technological literacy is the ability to understand and evaluate technology. It complements technological competency, which is the ability to create, repair, or operate specific technologies, commonly computers....
  • Computer literacy
    Computer literacy

    The term computer literacy is usually attributed to At an April 1972 American Federation of Information Processing Societies conference, Luehrmann gave a talk titled "Should the computer teach the student, or vice-versa." This talk was later published in Robert Taylor's 1980 book, The Computer in the School: Tutor, Tool, Tutee ....
  • Transliteracy
    Transliteracy

    Transliteracy is The ability to read, write and interact across a range of platforms, tools and media from signing and orality through handwriting, print, TV, radio and film, to digital social networks. The modern meaning of the term combines literacy with the prefix trans-, which means "across; through", so a transliterate...
  • e-learning
  • Digital storytelling
    Digital storytelling

    Digital Storytelling refers to using new digital tools to help ordinary people to tell their own real-life stories....
  • Media literacy
    Media literacy

    Media literacy is the process of accessing, analyzing, evaluating and creating messages in a wide variety of media modes, genres and forms. It uses an inquiry-based instructional model that encourages people to ask questions about what they watch, see, and read....
  • Media education
  • Media studies
    Media studies

    Media studies is a collection of academic programs regarding the content, history, meaning and effects of various media . Media studies scholars vary in the theoretical and methodological focus they bring to mass media topics, including the media's political, social, economic and cultural roles and impact....
  • Information literacy
    Information literacy

    Several conceptions and definitions of information literacy have become prevalent. For example, one conception defines information literacy in terms of a set of competencies that an informed citizen of an information society ought to possess to participate intelligently and actively in that society ....


External links

  • Aviram, R Talmi, D, 2004 ‘Are you a Technocrat A Reformist Or a Holist?’ eLearning Europa, http://www.elearningeuropa.info/index.php?page=doc&doc_id=4965&doclng=6&menuzone=1
  • Houghton, R.S. (2004). Rationale for Multimedia Use
and Instruction in Education. A unimedia composition. http://ceap.wcu.edu/houghton/MM/rationale/rationalemmframes.html
  • Learning to Change, 2001 OECD recovered from http://www.oecdbookshop.org/
  • The New Media Consortium (2005). The Global Imperative. The Report of the 21st Century Literacy Summit. NMC: The New Media Consortium. http://www.nmc.org/pdf/Global_Imperative.pdf
  • A New Paradigm for School Education (2005) elearning europa, http://elearningeuropa.info/index.php?page=doc&doc_id=5947&doclng=6&menuzone=1
  • Daley, Elizabeth (2003). Expanding the Concept of Literacy, http://iml.usc.edu/downloads/news_articles/erm0322.pdf
  • Goodman, S. (2003). Teaching Youth Media: A Critical Guide to Literacy, Video Production and Social Change. NY: Teachers College Press., http://www.evc.org/publications/teaching.html
  • Media Literacy in Russia, http://www.edu.of.ru/mediaeducation