Introduction To Media and Information Literacy
Introduction To Media and Information Literacy
Introduction To Media and Information Literacy
MEDIA AND
INFORMATION LITERACY
CHAPTER 1
“THE POWER OF MEDIA IS THE POWER
OF PERSUASION AND THE POWER OF
PERSUASION WILL WORK ONLY IF YOU
TELL THE TRUTH.”
-MAX SOLIVEN
Is communication
influenced by
information and
media?
Media Literacy, Information Literacy,
Technology Literacy are important for training
active citizen who exercise their roles
responsibly and effectively participate in
society.
Media Literacy
Examples are artifacts (e.g. excavated jar), audio recordings (e.g. radio
programs and interviews) original documents (i.e. birth certificates,
marriage licenses, trial transcripts), patents, photographs, proceedings
of meetings, conferences and symposia; records of organizations, and
government agencies (e.g. annual reports, government documents).
2. Secondary sources are accounts written after the fact. These
usually contain the “benefit of hindsight.” These are
interpretations and evaluations of the primary sources. Note
that secondary sources are not evidence themselves but
discussions or comments about a given evidence.
2. A telephone, or phone, is a
telecommunications device that allows two or
more people to conduct a conversation when
they are physically apart.
3. Radio and Television broadcast to a
large audience, but require that all
audience receive it at the same specific
time.