Description

Book Synopsis
Over the past forty years, media education research has emerged as a historical, epistemological and practical field of study. Shifts in the fieldalong with radical transformations in media technologies, aesthetic forms, ownership models, and audience participation practiceshave driven the application of new concepts and theories across a range of both school and non-school settings. The Handbook on Media Education Research is a unique exploration of the complex set of practices, theories, and tools of media research. Featuring contributions from a diverse range of internationally recognized experts and practitioners, this timely volume discusses recent developments in the field in the context of related scholarship, public policy, formal and non-formal teaching and learning, and DIY and community practice. Offering a truly global perspective, the Handbook focuses on empirical work from Media and Information Literacy (MIL) practitioners from around the world. The book's five parts expl

Table of Contents

Foreword xi
Ulla Carlsson

About the Editors xix

Notes on Contributors xxi

Introduction: Media Education Research in a Rapidly Changing Media Environment 1
Stuart R. Poyntz, Divina Frau-Meigs, Michael Hoechsmann, Sirkku Kotilainen, and Manisha Pathak-Shelat

Part I Global Youth Cultures 17
Stuart R. Poyntz

1 Micro-Celebrity Communities, and Media Education: Understanding Fan Practices on YouTube and Wattpad 19
Michael Dezuanni

2 Memes Production as Parodic Activism: Inclusion and Exclusion in Young People’s Digital Participation in Latin America 33
Rosalía Winocur and Inés Dussel

3 Youth, ICTs, and “Violent Extremism”: A Media Education Perspective 47
Sanjay Asthana

4 Unaccompanied Refugee Children and Media Literacy: Doing Media Education Research on the Margins 61
Annamária Neag

5 The Change in Young Australians’ Television Viewing Behavior and What It Means for the Future of Local Content 75
Marc C-Scott

6 “We Don’t Do That Here” and “Isme Tera Ghata, Mera Kuch Nahi Jata”: Young People’s Meme Cultures in India 85
Devina Sarwatay

7 Toward Hybridized and Glocalized Youth Identities in Africa: Revisiting Old Concerns and Reimagining New Possibilities for Media Education 97
Chikezie E. Uzuegbunam

8 Social Media Influences on Youth with Disabilities in the Global South 105
Tafadzwa Rugoho

Part II Pedagogies and Practices 113
Manisha Pathak‐Shelat

9 Toward Transmedia Learning: Practices, Approaches, and Tools 115
Maria-Jose Masanet, Gabriella Taddeo, and Simona Tirocchi

10 Youth Media Education in the Age of Algorithm-Driven Social Media 131
Sirkku Kotilainen, Jussi Okkonen, Jaakko Vuorio, and Karoliina Leisti

11 Integrating Nonviolent Communication in Pedagogies of Media Literacy Education 141
Vedabhyas Kundu

12 Different Countries, Similar Issues: Media Binds or Blinds? 155
Melda N. Yildiz

13 Teaching Gender and Sexuality in a Critical Media Literacy Framework: Curriculum, Pedagogical Interventions, and Autoethnographic Reflections 167
Ruchi Jaggi

14 Competencies About the News for Elementary School Children 175
Ioli Campos

15 Looking for Digital (Alter) Natives: Why Teachers’ Beliefs About Children Matter in Media Education 183
Pekka Mertala and Saara Salomaa

16 Understanding Media Regulation in the Public Interest 189
Robert Beveridge

17 “Doing Journalism Isn’t Lying” – Literacies and Fake News in an Experience with Children in the Invisibility Triad 195
Lumárya Souza de Sousa and Thaiane Oliveira

18 Teaching Media Literacy Through Scientific Controversies 201
José Azevedo

19 Teaching Interactive Narratives: Developing User Engagement Through Theory-Empowered Practice 207
Willemien Sanders

Part III Histories 215
Michael Hoechsmann

20 Media Education History: The Early Years 217
Keval J. Kumar

21 Media Education 3.0? How Big Data, Algorithms, and AI Redefine Media Education 229
Grzegorz Ptaszek

22 Media Education in Latin America: The Paradigm of Educommunication 241
Cláudia Lago, Claudemir E. Viana, Maria Cristina Palma Mungioli, and Marciel Consani

23 A Brief History of Media Education in Chile 253
Pablo Andrada and Cristian Cabalin

24 Nordic Perspectives on the History and Future of Media Education 259
Reijo Kupiainen and Daniel Schofield

25 Media Education in Israel – Mainstreaming the Avant-Garde 267
Arielle Friedman, Ornat Turin, and Orly Melamed

26 Media Education in the Czech Republic: Vision and Disconnection 275
Lucie Römer

27 Media Education in India: Policy and Praxis in Old and New Communication Media 281
C.S.H.N. Murthy

Part IV Institutions and Policy Developments 289
Divina Frau‐Meigs

28 Defining Media Education Policies: Building Blocks, Scope, and Characteristics 291
Normand Landry and Christiane Caneva

29 The Development of Media Literacy in Chinese Societies: From Grassroots Efforts to Institutional Support 309
Alice Y.L. Lee

30 Digital Privacy Policy Literacy: A Framework for Canadian Youth 327
Leslie Regan Shade and Sharly Chan

31 Searching for Common Ground: Multiliteracy and Curricular Consistency in the Finnish Education System 339
Lauri Palsa

32 Taking Media Literacy Education in Armenia to the Next Level: From Civil Society Movement to Post-Revolution Government Efforts 347
Lusine Grigoryan

33 Media Education Challenges in a Digital Society: The Case of Chile 355
Rayén Condeza Dall’Orso, Myrna Gálvez Johnson, Nadia Herrada Hidalgo, and Francisco J. Fernandez Medina

34 Landscape and Terrain of Digital Literacy Policy and Practice: Canada in the Twenty-First Century 363
Helen DeWaard and Michael Hoechsmann

35 Media Education Policy Developments in Times of “Fake News”: The Case of the Czech Republic 373
Markéta Supa, Lucie Štástna, and Jan Jirak

Part V Critical Citizenship and Futures 381
Sirkku Kotilainen

36 Expanding Ethics to the Environment with Ecomedia Literacy 383
Antonio Lopez

37 Engaging the World: Social Media Literacy for Transcultural Citizenship 399
Manisha Pathak-Shelat and Kiran Vinod Bhatia

38 Data and Privacy Literacy: The Role of the School in Educating Children in a Datafied Society 413
Sonia Livingstone, Mariya Stoilova, and Rishita Nandagiri

39 Media Education and Dynamic Research: Known Unknowns and Rich Intersections 427
Julian McDougall and Isabella Rega

40 Radical Media Education Practices from Social Movement Media: Lessons from Teaching and Learning in Lebanon 441
Gretchen King

41 Activating Student Voice and Choice Globally: Reframing Negative Narratives in Ghana 449
Ed Madison

42 Advocacy as Media Education: The Educational Activities of Digital Rights Advocates 459
Efrat Daskal

43 Cyberbullying, Media Education, and Agents of Socialization in Montenegro 467
Ida Cortoni and Jelena Perović

Index 475

The Handbook of Media Education Research

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    A Hardback by Divina Frau-Meigs, Sirkku Kotilainen, Manisha Pathak-Shelat

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      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 21/09/2020
      ISBN13: 9781119166870, 978-1119166870
      ISBN10: 111916687X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Over the past forty years, media education research has emerged as a historical, epistemological and practical field of study. Shifts in the fieldalong with radical transformations in media technologies, aesthetic forms, ownership models, and audience participation practiceshave driven the application of new concepts and theories across a range of both school and non-school settings. The Handbook on Media Education Research is a unique exploration of the complex set of practices, theories, and tools of media research. Featuring contributions from a diverse range of internationally recognized experts and practitioners, this timely volume discusses recent developments in the field in the context of related scholarship, public policy, formal and non-formal teaching and learning, and DIY and community practice. Offering a truly global perspective, the Handbook focuses on empirical work from Media and Information Literacy (MIL) practitioners from around the world. The book's five parts expl

      Table of Contents

      Foreword xi
      Ulla Carlsson

      About the Editors xix

      Notes on Contributors xxi

      Introduction: Media Education Research in a Rapidly Changing Media Environment 1
      Stuart R. Poyntz, Divina Frau-Meigs, Michael Hoechsmann, Sirkku Kotilainen, and Manisha Pathak-Shelat

      Part I Global Youth Cultures 17
      Stuart R. Poyntz

      1 Micro-Celebrity Communities, and Media Education: Understanding Fan Practices on YouTube and Wattpad 19
      Michael Dezuanni

      2 Memes Production as Parodic Activism: Inclusion and Exclusion in Young People’s Digital Participation in Latin America 33
      Rosalía Winocur and Inés Dussel

      3 Youth, ICTs, and “Violent Extremism”: A Media Education Perspective 47
      Sanjay Asthana

      4 Unaccompanied Refugee Children and Media Literacy: Doing Media Education Research on the Margins 61
      Annamária Neag

      5 The Change in Young Australians’ Television Viewing Behavior and What It Means for the Future of Local Content 75
      Marc C-Scott

      6 “We Don’t Do That Here” and “Isme Tera Ghata, Mera Kuch Nahi Jata”: Young People’s Meme Cultures in India 85
      Devina Sarwatay

      7 Toward Hybridized and Glocalized Youth Identities in Africa: Revisiting Old Concerns and Reimagining New Possibilities for Media Education 97
      Chikezie E. Uzuegbunam

      8 Social Media Influences on Youth with Disabilities in the Global South 105
      Tafadzwa Rugoho

      Part II Pedagogies and Practices 113
      Manisha Pathak‐Shelat

      9 Toward Transmedia Learning: Practices, Approaches, and Tools 115
      Maria-Jose Masanet, Gabriella Taddeo, and Simona Tirocchi

      10 Youth Media Education in the Age of Algorithm-Driven Social Media 131
      Sirkku Kotilainen, Jussi Okkonen, Jaakko Vuorio, and Karoliina Leisti

      11 Integrating Nonviolent Communication in Pedagogies of Media Literacy Education 141
      Vedabhyas Kundu

      12 Different Countries, Similar Issues: Media Binds or Blinds? 155
      Melda N. Yildiz

      13 Teaching Gender and Sexuality in a Critical Media Literacy Framework: Curriculum, Pedagogical Interventions, and Autoethnographic Reflections 167
      Ruchi Jaggi

      14 Competencies About the News for Elementary School Children 175
      Ioli Campos

      15 Looking for Digital (Alter) Natives: Why Teachers’ Beliefs About Children Matter in Media Education 183
      Pekka Mertala and Saara Salomaa

      16 Understanding Media Regulation in the Public Interest 189
      Robert Beveridge

      17 “Doing Journalism Isn’t Lying” – Literacies and Fake News in an Experience with Children in the Invisibility Triad 195
      Lumárya Souza de Sousa and Thaiane Oliveira

      18 Teaching Media Literacy Through Scientific Controversies 201
      José Azevedo

      19 Teaching Interactive Narratives: Developing User Engagement Through Theory-Empowered Practice 207
      Willemien Sanders

      Part III Histories 215
      Michael Hoechsmann

      20 Media Education History: The Early Years 217
      Keval J. Kumar

      21 Media Education 3.0? How Big Data, Algorithms, and AI Redefine Media Education 229
      Grzegorz Ptaszek

      22 Media Education in Latin America: The Paradigm of Educommunication 241
      Cláudia Lago, Claudemir E. Viana, Maria Cristina Palma Mungioli, and Marciel Consani

      23 A Brief History of Media Education in Chile 253
      Pablo Andrada and Cristian Cabalin

      24 Nordic Perspectives on the History and Future of Media Education 259
      Reijo Kupiainen and Daniel Schofield

      25 Media Education in Israel – Mainstreaming the Avant-Garde 267
      Arielle Friedman, Ornat Turin, and Orly Melamed

      26 Media Education in the Czech Republic: Vision and Disconnection 275
      Lucie Römer

      27 Media Education in India: Policy and Praxis in Old and New Communication Media 281
      C.S.H.N. Murthy

      Part IV Institutions and Policy Developments 289
      Divina Frau‐Meigs

      28 Defining Media Education Policies: Building Blocks, Scope, and Characteristics 291
      Normand Landry and Christiane Caneva

      29 The Development of Media Literacy in Chinese Societies: From Grassroots Efforts to Institutional Support 309
      Alice Y.L. Lee

      30 Digital Privacy Policy Literacy: A Framework for Canadian Youth 327
      Leslie Regan Shade and Sharly Chan

      31 Searching for Common Ground: Multiliteracy and Curricular Consistency in the Finnish Education System 339
      Lauri Palsa

      32 Taking Media Literacy Education in Armenia to the Next Level: From Civil Society Movement to Post-Revolution Government Efforts 347
      Lusine Grigoryan

      33 Media Education Challenges in a Digital Society: The Case of Chile 355
      Rayén Condeza Dall’Orso, Myrna Gálvez Johnson, Nadia Herrada Hidalgo, and Francisco J. Fernandez Medina

      34 Landscape and Terrain of Digital Literacy Policy and Practice: Canada in the Twenty-First Century 363
      Helen DeWaard and Michael Hoechsmann

      35 Media Education Policy Developments in Times of “Fake News”: The Case of the Czech Republic 373
      Markéta Supa, Lucie Štástna, and Jan Jirak

      Part V Critical Citizenship and Futures 381
      Sirkku Kotilainen

      36 Expanding Ethics to the Environment with Ecomedia Literacy 383
      Antonio Lopez

      37 Engaging the World: Social Media Literacy for Transcultural Citizenship 399
      Manisha Pathak-Shelat and Kiran Vinod Bhatia

      38 Data and Privacy Literacy: The Role of the School in Educating Children in a Datafied Society 413
      Sonia Livingstone, Mariya Stoilova, and Rishita Nandagiri

      39 Media Education and Dynamic Research: Known Unknowns and Rich Intersections 427
      Julian McDougall and Isabella Rega

      40 Radical Media Education Practices from Social Movement Media: Lessons from Teaching and Learning in Lebanon 441
      Gretchen King

      41 Activating Student Voice and Choice Globally: Reframing Negative Narratives in Ghana 449
      Ed Madison

      42 Advocacy as Media Education: The Educational Activities of Digital Rights Advocates 459
      Efrat Daskal

      43 Cyberbullying, Media Education, and Agents of Socialization in Montenegro 467
      Ida Cortoni and Jelena Perović

      Index 475

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