3.1 Approaches to Literacy
Learning Objectives
- Define media literacy.
- Describe the role of individual responsibility and accountability when responding to pop culture.
- List the five key considerations about any media message.
Culkin called the pervasiveness of media “the unnoticed fact of our present,” noting that media information was as omnipresent and easy to overlook as the air we breathe (and, he noted, “some would add that it is just as polluted”).[1] Our exposure to media starts early—a study by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that 68 percent of children ages 2 and younger spend an average of 2 hours in front of a screen (either computer or television) each day, while children under 6 spend as much time in front of a screen as they do playing outside.[2] U.S. teenagers are spending an average of 7.5 hours with media daily, nearly as long as they spend in school. Media literacy isn’t merely a skill for young people, however. Today’s Americans get much of their information from various media sources—but not all that information is created equal. One crucial role of media literacy education is to enable us to skeptically examine the often-conflicting media messages we receive every day.
The Academic Approach to Studying the Mass Media
In the past, one goal of education was to provide students with the information deemed necessary to successfully engage with the world. Students memorized multiplication tables, state capitals, famous poems, and notable dates. Today, however, vast amounts of information are available at the click of a mouse. Even before the advent of the Internet, noted communications scholar David Berlo foresaw the consequences of expanding information technology: “Most of what we have called formal education has been intended to imprint on the human mind all of the information that we might need for a lifetime.” Changes in technology necessitate changes in how we learn, Berlo noted, and these days “education needs to be geared toward the handling of data rather than the accumulation of data.”[3]
Wikipedia, a hugely popular Internet encyclopedia, is at the forefront of the debate on the proper use of online sources. In 2007, Middlebury College banned the use of Wikipedia as a source in history papers and exams. One of the school’s librarians noted that the online encyclopedia “symbolizes the best and worst of the Internet. It’s the best because everyone gets his/her say and can state their views. It’s the worst because people who use it uncritically take for truth what is only opinion.”[4] Or, as comedian and satirist Stephen Colbert put it, “Any user can change any entry, and if enough other users agree with them, it becomes true.”[5] A computer registered to the U.S. Democratic Party changed the Wikipedia page for Rush Limbaugh to proclaim that he was “racist” and a “bigot,” and a person working for the electronic voting machine manufacturer Diebold was found to have erased paragraphs connecting the company to Republican campaign funds.[6] Media literacy teaches today’s students how to sort through the Internet’s cloud of data, locate reliable sources, and identify bias and unreliable sources.
If you have been reading the chapters of this text in order, by this point you will be aware of the powerful role the mass media play in society, but you may not yet question whether society benefits from this arrangement. In general, the mass media could do a better job of representing all sorts of groups and group cultures. The mass media could also represent abstract concepts like love, trust, and greed in more meaningful ways. This is not to say that the mass media have failed in this regard, but there is much room for improvement.
As active audience members, as hybrid producer-users or “produsers” (to use a term coined by Axel Bruns),[7] you must not only be selective but also critical of what you consume. Whether you become media professionals or not, it will ultimately be your job as media consumers to remake the mass media in ways that better represent the depth of human experience.
Whether your interest is a religion, a fandom, or an abstract concept like love (one of the greatest of abstractions), you have the power to participate in the media production redefining how others understand it.
No, this is not a book about love. Yes, love and related concepts are commodified in the mass media; however, the disruption that has echoed in political spheres and often in the ways family and cultural group members speak to one another about politics also opens up space for critical thinking.
This chapter gives you some tools developed by mass communication scholars to develop your critical eye when viewing messages as products in the mass media. If massive numbers of “produsers” can reshape the media landscape, we have to re-think the role of mass media professionals.[8] Assisting people in the process of meaning-making — that is, making mass media with audiences instead of for them and aiding them in their own communication efforts — could open up a new purpose and new industries for those who are mentally prepared and daring enough to take the lead.
This chapter defines “media literacy” and touches on some key mass communication theories that are absolutely not meant to be left to molder in the digital cloud where this text”book” lives. Take these theories out, apply them, and see how they work. Find out how useful they can be and what their limitations are.
This text presents an image of entire societies and cultures swimming in a sea of media. Consider these concepts your first set of snorkel and swim-fins.
Media Literacy Defined
Media literacy is a term describing media consumers’ understanding of how mass media work. It includes knowing where different types of information can be found, how best to evaluate information, who owns the major mass media platforms, how messages are produced, and how they are framed to suit various interests.
In a global society that gets most of its information through digital networks, it is incredibly important to know how and by whom media messages are made so that, as consumers, we can discern how the mass media are being used to shape our opinions. We can reply to or comment on messages in the mass media, or we can demand a seat at the table when messages are being constructed. This is the nature of participatory media outlined in the previous chapter. Being media literate gives us the tools to participate well and with purpose.
It is important to consider your role in contributing directly to mass media content. Your contributions to cultural trends and social change in the mass media can sometimes happen without your knowledge. If you post regularly to Facebook or other social media platforms, your data are being aggregated, and that information is used by advertisers, researchers, and news services to find out what you like and what you are like, as well as to create ads and political messages tailored just for you.
You are more than your preferences and the media you consume. You are encouraged to play an active role in shaping your digital identity beyond the one that has already been created for you.[9]
Social Media Literacy
Social media literacy involves examining platforms like Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter and understanding the technical, cognitive, and emotional aspects of content analysis. On a technical level, it means grasping the platform’s workings, content posting permissions, interaction mechanisms, and the algorithms shaping content visibility. Cognitively, it requires discerning reliable sources by evaluating user bios, follower counts, join dates, and offline affiliations. Additionally, social media literacy extends to recognizing and managing emotional responses to content and interactions.
Social media platforms, in contrast to mass media, are demanding and responsive to user participation, shaping users’ conceptions of identity and reality. Through social media, users create their realities by interacting with the creator and the content. Based on that, a model called SoMeLit introduced three content dimensions of social media literacy.[10]
The Self
The Self is the knowledge about the self and its relationships with its social media content choices, consumption, engagement, and social media network environment. Unlike traditional media literacy, social media literacy emphasizes knowing oneself and one’s behaviors within the context of social media platforms. Since various motivations result in diverse outcomes, recognizing motivations is an essential first step in becoming social media literate. Beyond motivations and content choices, social networks—both online and offline—play a critical role in shaping the self on social media. Users, guided by their motivations, shape personalized content through a plethora of options and digital algorithms, creating customized media environments frequently referred to as “filter bubbles.” Users engage with egocentric networks that affect how much information they absorb and how they produce it—these networks’ features influence not just how material is consumed but also how it is made. Fundamentally, thorough awareness and comprehension of one’s motivations, decisions, and social networks is necessary for social media literacy.
The Medium
The medium is the understanding of the technological affordances and architectures of social media platforms, the absence of journalistic protocols and conventions of sourcing and fact-checking, and the governing economic and political interests. At the moment, the majority of media literacy research is concerned with content analysis; the unique characteristics of each medium are receiving less attention. Social media platforms are dynamic, influenced by user conventions and technological possibilities, in contrast to traditional media. According to media theory, different identities and realities are created across platforms by the medium’s inherent influence on social and human processes. By enabling users to actively participate, social media’s technological affordances challenge the mass media’s hegemony in agenda-setting. But because there are no journalistic standards on these sites, there are drawbacks as well, such as hate speech and false information. Social media are less subject to formal rules than mass media, which gives them greater political and financial freedom. Users are therefore given more responsibility to assess the reliability of information. A literate person should be able to use social media with an understanding of the platforms’ fixed and flexible features as well as how user interactions affect users’ perceptions of reality. A social media literate person should be able to use social media with an understanding of the platforms’ fixed and flexible features as well as how user interactions affect users’ perceptions of reality.
The Reality
The reality is the awareness of the multiplicity and malleability of realities on social media, and the multiple criteria people use to judge the realism of social media content. The nature of the medium shapes social and personal processes, resulting in a variety of identities and realities across platforms, claims media theory. Due to the lack of journalistic norms, social media presents issues including hate speech and disinformation, in addition to challenging the mass media’s hegemony in agenda-setting. Social media are more flexible politically and economically than mass media as they are not subject to formal rules. Users now have a great deal of responsibility to assess the reliability of information. In conclusion, a media literate individual ought to be aware of how user interactions affect users’ views of reality in addition to the stable and adjustable features of platforms.
Skills Developed from Social Media Literacy
Being adept at analyzing social media posts and online news stories turns you into a discerning consumer. Ideally, these critical thinking skills should be integral to 21st-century education. Recognizing that media is crafted from specific perspectives is a crucial skill. Furthermore, being able to identify the impact of media on politics and society enables you to discern the values inherent in them and understand who gains from promoting these values.
Critical Thinking
Critical thinking is media literacy put into action. Besides contributing to the creation of meaning by making your own mass media messages (perhaps in collaboration with professionals), you can ask who owns major mass media corporations. Scholars have found that more than half of the mass media channels available to mass audiences in America are owned by only five corporations or firms.[11] Additional research has shown that just by making people aware of the nature of media ownership, you can encourage them to be skeptical of mass media content.[12]
This text has already established that mass communication is what makes society in the physical world work. Information, often in the form of messages in the mass media, permeates institutional interactions and passes between all of us in our homes, and schools, and businesses. The information conveyed in the mass media gets interpreted in organizational, group and interpersonal communication contexts. These systems influence each other, but mass media messages tend to envelop and permeate other forms of communication. Thus, if you learn to be skeptical of the information you receive in the mass media, you learn how to critique the whole global social system.
Critique this Book
Reading closely, you will have undoubtedly found value judgments in this text already. You may be inclined to assign political values to this text in our hyper-partisan cultural environment. You are welcome to do this. You are encouraged to do this. You must think critically about the cultural values expressed not only in this text but also in your other textbooks and in the history and literature you read.
But you also must think critically about your preferred media outlets. Where do they get their information from? Who owns them? No single revelation about the mass media will tell you everything you need to know. You have to begin to see nuance and to think for yourself what aspects of the mass media matter most to you, what things you think should change, how you might change them, and what you can live with.
It is part of the responsibility of citizens now to critique messages that come to us via mass media, as well as messages from leaders who bypass mass media gatekeepers and fact checkers. It is also a sound career strategy for those who go into the mass communication field to learn to be able to critique messages, messengers and owners in the corporate mass media field of work and play. To know where the mass media industry is headed, you must be able to think critically about where it comes from.
Much of the rest of this book breaks down different mass media channels and looks briefly at the history of how each came to be, what and whom each channel serves, and how convergence in a digitally networked society might affect the future of each medium. This text also returns several times to “big picture” questions about the dynamic relationship between media and society as seen from the perspective of the various mass communication channels and platforms.
The Dichotomy Between the Media and the “Real World”
To the extent they are shaped by mass media, our perceptions of reality are very much artificial — but not entirely so. How artificial is too artificial? Different individuals and different cultures differ in the amount of nonsense they can tolerate.
The real challenge to us as young media professionals and scholars is to try to determine what is artificial in the vast array of messages delivered to us at all times by the mass media. One of the best ways to do this is to get off of social media platforms and talk to people in person. We should also dig a bit into the information we consume and ask, “How do they know?” Whenever a message comes to us from a mass media outlet or from a friend’s social media post, the media literate individual seeks to know what underlies each claim.
The question is not whether you believe it. The question is: On what grounds is a message in the mass media or in social media believable?
Now that people are constantly using technology and even wearing it,[13] it is becoming more difficult to separate messages mediated by professionals, who pledge ethically to adhere to disseminating factual information (such as most journalists), from poorly-supported, opinion-only content or outright misinformation, which may be spread far and wide by friends and family.
We are living in a media age where we may not trust our own family members’ social media posts. Things they think are important might not only be unimportant to us, they might be distasteful or even wrong. There are real-world consequences to sharing misinformation on social media platforms. Question the sources’ sources. Talk to people in tangible spaces apart from social media platforms, and you can learn to see what is supported by fact in the physical world and its digital networks.
The Bad Dynamic
Your media choices matter. In the network society, when mass media content is ubiquitous on mobile phones and is often projected into public spaces, it can be difficult to differentiate between your independent preferences and the opinions you are encouraged to carry by advertisers who constantly bombard you.
Without human interaction outside of the deluge of electronic information, it can be nearly impossible to figure out for yourself if what you like is a response to the quality of the media content or if you are responding to carefully targeted marketing campaigns.
The system of checks and balances in which you can compare your real life experiences to what you see and hear in the mass media may break down. A pessimistic view is that we may enter a constant state of depression on a social level because we are cognitively incapable of comprehending all of the information presented to us and we lack ways of taking regular “reality checks.”
Feelings of isolation and inadequacy coupled with cognitive overload create the potential for a host of social issues. Additionally, the images we see in ads and the perfected versions of themselves people present on social media usually do not reflect applied critical thinking.
The “bad dynamic” that comes into play is one where glossy identities are carefully constructed and protected while our real identities rapidly disintegrate. We may establish a society where many people have identity issues, and those issues are constantly worsening. It may seem at times as though we are headed for a massive collective mental breakdown.
What good is media literacy? Thinking critically about the mass media and content spread on social media helps us critique constructed images and accept our own shortcomings. If we look for ways to relate to one another besides our overlapping common culture interests, we may find deeper connections are possible. We can share imperfections and tackle doubts, but only if we acknowledge them in our media world first.
What follows is a set of mass communication theories arrived at through the analysis of facts and data by thousands of scholars over the course of nearly 100 years. As an academic field, mass communication is young, but there are several theories, or guiding abstractions, that can help us to see how our society is structured and what roles the mass media play in society at all levels.
Key Takeaways
- Media literacy is essential in the modern age, enabling individuals to access, analyze, evaluate, and communicate information. It helps in understanding the new languages of mass media and discerning how messages are made, thus empowering people to think critically about the information they consume and the influences shaping their opinions.
- The mass media’s portrayal of concepts like love and identity can be misleading and artificial, driven by profit motives and often lacking genuine understanding. This portrayal emphasizes mystery and ignorance over knowledge, potentially leading to misconceptions and a disconnect between media representations and real human experiences.
- The pervasive influence of media in daily life, coupled with the bombardment of information and carefully targeted marketing campaigns, can lead to feelings of isolation, inadequacy, and cognitive overload. Media literacy offers a way to critique these constructed images, accept your imperfections, and foster deeper connections, but it also warns of potential societal issues if these challenges are not addressed.
Exercises
- Understanding Media Literacy: How has your perception of media literacy changed after reading this text? Reflect on how you previously engaged with media and how you might approach media consumption and analysis differently in the future.
- The Dichotomy Between Media and Reality: The text discusses the artificial nature of perceptions shaped by mass media. How do you see this dichotomy playing out in your own life or society at large? What strategies can you employ to discern what is artificial and what is grounded in fact?
- Role of Technology in Communication: Reflect on the example of teaching a community member to use Skype. How do you see technology bridging or widening generational and cultural divides? Consider both the opportunities and challenges that technology presents in fostering genuine human connections.
Media Attributions
- Technologies to reach out to one another. © Knight Foundation, Knight-Crane Convergence Lab is licensed under a CC BY-SA (Attribution ShareAlike) license
- Moody, K. (n.d.). John Culkin, SJ: The Man Who Invented Media Literacy: 1928-1993. Center for Media Literacy. Retrieved January 23, 2024, from https://web.archive.org/web/20221128015328/http://www.centerformedialiteracy.org/reading-room/john-culkin-sj-man-who-invented-media-literacy-1928-1993. ↵
- Lewin, Tamar. “If Your Kids Are Awake, They’re Probably Online.” The New York Times, January 20, 2010, sec. Education. https://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/20/education/20wired.html. ↵
- Shaw, David. “A Plea for Media Literacy in our Nation’s Schools,” Los Angeles Times, November 30, 2003. ↵
- Byers, Meredith “Controversy Over Use of Wikipedia in Academic Papers Arrives at Smith,” Smith College Sophian, News section, March 8, 2007. ↵
- Colbert, Stephen. “The Word: Wikiality,” The Colbert Report, July 31, 2006. ↵
- Fildes, Jonathan. “Wikipedia ‘Shows CIA Page Edits,’” BBC News, Science and Technology section, August 15, 2007. ↵
- Bruns, Axel. “Produsage.” In Proceedings of the 6th ACM SIGCHI Conference on Creativity & Cognition, 99–106. C&C ’07. New York, NY, USA: Association for Computing Machinery, 2007. https://doi.org/10.1145/1254960.1254975. ↵
- Rosen, Jay. “PressThink: The People Formerly Known as the Audience,” June 27, 2006. http://archive.pressthink.org/2006/06/27/ppl_frmr.html. ↵
- The Local Germany. “German Watchdog Finds Facebook Data Harvesting ‘abusive’ for Users,” December 19, 2017. https://www.thelocal.de/20171219/german-watchdog-facebook-data-abuse. ↵
- McNulty, N. (2023, October 11). “Why is internet and social media literacy so important? 5 steps to a conscious consumer.” Niall McNulty. https://www.niallmcnulty.com/2021/03/internet-literacy-social-media-literacy/#htoc-what-is-internet-literacy ↵
- Drake, Jeff. A Summary of Ben Bagdikian’s “The Media Monopoly.” (July 19, 2017). https://web.archive.org/web/20170918144313/https://www.jeffdrake.org/2017/07/19/a-summary-of-ben-bagdikians-the-media-monopoly/ ↵
- Ashley, Seth, Mark Poepsel, and Erin Willis. “Media Literacy and News Credibility: Does Knowledge of Media Ownership Increase Skepticism in News Consumers?” Journal of Media Literacy Education 2, no. 1 (September 10, 2013). https://doi.org/10.23860/jmle-2-1-3. ↵
- Doak, Alex. “The Apple Watch’s Success Has Created a Luxury Smartwatch Boom.” Wired UK. Accessed September 3, 2023. https://www.wired.co.uk/article/apple-watch-sales-smartwatches-montblanc-tag-heuer. ↵