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MIL Module

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
62 views11 pages

MIL Module

Uploaded by

Chris Tian
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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12

MEDIA AND
INFORMATION LITERACY
Quarter 2 – Module:11
PEOPLE AND MEDIA
Pre-Test
A. Multiple Choice Select the letter of the best answer from the given choices.

1. This refers to the persons that are involved in the use, analysis, evaluation and
production of media and information.
A. media practitioners C. people Media
B. online classroom teachers D. editors

2. This refers to a leader for a certain group who gives details and information to
lesser active persons in the group.
A. opinion leader C. factual leader
B. campus journalism D. crowdsourcing

3. People without professional journalism training can use the tools of modern
technology and the global distribution of the Internet to create, augment or
factcheck media on their own or in collaboration with others.
A. Campus Journalism C. Social Journalism
B. Network Journalism D. Citizen Journalism

4. They are the ones who have abilities in accessing, evaluating and producing
information using several forms of media.
A. Print Journalists C. Photo Journalists
B. Multimedia Journalists D. Broadcast Journalists

5. These are people who underwent training in journalism writing. Equipped with
the fundamental and significant knowledge and strategies in writing news and
stories based from real events in the community.
A. Print Journalists C. Photo Journalists
B. Multimedia Journalists D. Broadcast Journalists

6. They are skilled not just in journalism but also in public speaking.
A. Print Journalists C. Photo Journalists
B. Multimedia Journalists D. Broadcast Journalists

7. The Crowdsourcing is the practice of obtaining needed services, ideas, or content


by soliciting contributions from a large group of people and especially from the
online community.
A. Social Journalism C. Citizen Journalism
B. Crowdsourcing D. Opinion Leaders
8. Wikis are applications allowing several people to collaborate, modify, extend, or
delete the contents or structure of a particular page devoted to a topic or
content.
A. Wikis C. Trip Advisor
B. Alibaba D. Waze
9. It is a community-driven GPS and navigational app that guides you through the
shortest route possible while driving.
A. Alibaba C. Wikipedia
B. Trip Advisor D. Waze
10.Here the journalists are using social media to make their content available to
more people.
A. Citizen Journalism C. Opinion Leaders
B. Social Journalism D. Crowdsourcing
MI
L PEOPLE AND MEDIA
To become a media literate is not to memorize facts or statistics about the
media but rather to learn, to raise the right questions about what you are
watching, reading, or listening to and to be information literate. A person must be
able to recognize when information is needed and have the ability to locate and
evaluate.

In this lesson, you will describe the different dimensions of people as media and
categorize the different examples of people in media. According to B. Liquigan,
“messages shape the way you think and behave so you should be aware of the
extent of the influence of this messages and the covert/subtle ways that they
influence you”. He also added that media technologies are merely inanimate objects
that will only function when controlled by human beings. So essentially, humans are
the sources of information that are only relayed through these technologies.

Activity 1: Categorize Me
Instructions: Copy the table below in your worksheet or notebook, and put a
check mark (✓) on the cell to which you believe the item may be appropriately
categorized.
People as Media People in Media
1. Independent Blogger
2. Television Producer
3. Film Director
4. Print Journalist
5. University Professor
6. Business Analyst
7. Magazine Publisher
8. Radio Jockey
9. Online Marketer
10. Advertiser

PEOPLE AND MEDIA


The People Media refers to persons that are involved in the use, analysis,
evaluation and production of media and information (Source: DepEd MIL Curriculum
Guide).

The Effects of Media

In media education, the three main paradigm on effects are:


1. Powerful and direct effects - The most classic and debunked theory in
direct effect is magic-bullet or hypodermic needle theory which states that
media is capable of greatly influencing the attitude and behaviors of these
audiences without even realizing it. Audiences are considered automations
and are at the mercy of media.

2. Limited Effect – Limited effects paradigm, believes that you are highly
capable of discerning propaganda and that media has limited capacity to
persuade you.

3. Moderate Effect – Moderate effects paradigm is reconciliatory and is mid-


way between the two. Audiences are not passive and are capable of creating
meaningful experience. This paradigm acknowledges that “media effects can
occur over longer period of time.

PEOPLE AS MEDIA
These are individuals who serve as channels of information dissemination.
Before, they make use of writing essays, literature and news to create artefacts. But
with the advent of technology and social media, people are now empowered to not
just produce artefacts but also evaluate, analyze, edit and give feedback to media
artefacts.

1. Opinion Leaders

You are considered Opinion Leaders when you are highly exposed to and
activity using media. They are the source of viable interpretation of messages for
lower-end media users and often times the opinions are accepted by a group.

The Two-step Flow Communication Model (1944)

As you can remember, a theory is


a possible explanation for an event
or a phenomenon. The two-step
flow theory explains the role of
opinion leaders in

the theory are Paul Lazarsfeld and


Elihu Katz.

Variations of the theory have


been developed by other
scholars such as Robert Merton, C.
Wright Mills, and Bernard
Berelson. The two-step theory is
alternatively known as the
diffusion of innovation theory
because innovative ideas are
diffused or transferred to media
Photo Credit: users through opinion leaders.
https://study.com/academy/lesson/two-stepflow-
communication-model.html Katz identified the following reasons
as to why opinion leaders are more
influential than the media themselves:

a. They are seen as trustworthy and non-purposive.


b. They have a more changing or determining role in an individual’s opinion
or action.

You become an effective opinion leader when you are able to influence your
followers to produce educated opinions and make informed choices.

2. Citizen Journalism

These are People without


professional journalism training can
use the tools of modern technology
and internet to create, augment or
fact-check media on their own or in
collaboration with others.
"Citizen Journalism also
known as “public,” “participatory,”
“democratic,” "guerrilla,” or “street”
journalism, citizen journalism occurs
when members of reportage,
analysis, and dissemination of news Photo Credit:
and information go other https://i0.wp.com/newsliteracymatters.com/f
citizens (mashable.com). iles/2019/09/rudy.jpg?w=1000&ssl=1
Citizen journalism refers to any
type of news gathering and reporting -- writing and publishing articles about a
newsworthy topic, or posting photographs or video of a newsworthy event -- that is
done by members of the general public rather than the professional news agencies
commonly referred to as "mainstream media."
Before the public become active participants in the collection, the Internet,
only professional journalists had access to the technology and organizational
infrastructure to publish their work to a large audience. If the average citizen
wanted to contribute to the news cycle, he or she could write a letter to the editor
or circulate a homemade newspaper or "zine" through the mail. But today, armed
with a PC and a high-speed Internet connection, absolutely anyone can share
newsworthy information and opinions with a worldwide audience.
Ordinary citizen like you become people media in your own rights because
you perform the same functions professional journalist do. Most people consider
citizen journalism as “a specific form of both citizen media and user generated
content.

3. Social Journalism

Here the journalists are using social media to make their content available to more
people.
Even though recreational social media
usage may be on the decline in some
ways, more
"functional" uses of social media, and its
purposes, are on the rise through
the use of "social journalism."

The current state of journalism looks


quite differently than it did just years
ago, and the creation of social media
sites has evolved the field of journalism
even further, giving the average person
the power to make and report the news
like never before. We get our news

Photo Credit:
https://www.cision.com/content/dam/cision
/Resources/white-
papers/WP_Social_Journalism_Report_3.png
instantly now, and most of that news comes via social media sites like Twitter and
Facebook.

With the rise of social media as a means to obtain and share news and information
has also come the
emergence of social news networks.
Social news networks are online publications that work as a community of
writers and editors that choose what news is, and what's not.
Described as a sort of "news bank," social news websites like Reddit and Digg
allow users to submit news stories, articles, pictures and videos to share with other
users. Editors then determine the items to be featured. For contributing writers,
these publications are excellent ways to get noticed, and for editors, it's a great way
to experience more journalistic freedom and possibly make an impact on the larger
news media circuit. And many of these stories go viral, bringing a few minutes of
fame to potentially unknown writers or publications.

4. Crowdsourcing
The Crowdsourcing is the practice of obtaining needed services, ideas,
or content by soliciting contributions
from a large group of people
and especially
http://www.merriam-
websters.com/dictionary/
crowdsourcing)

This is when a group of


people or a crowd is solicited for
information by certain entities or
institutions. It is also called
collective mobilization
Photo Credit:
https://images.glaciermedia.ca/polopoly_fs/1.23
187120.1519827191!/fileImage/httpImage/imag Example of Crowdsourcing:
1. e.png_gen/derivatives/landscape_804/4hth4.png Trip Advisor
(https://www.tripadvisor.com) Tripadvisor, Inc. a
company founded by Stephen Kaufer, it’s an American online
travel company that operates a website and mobile app with
user-generated content and a
comparison shopping
website. It is the world's largest travel site*, enabling travelers to plan and
have the perfect trip. The sites operate in 30 countries worldwide, including
China under daodao.com

Photo Credit:
https://1000logos.net/wpcontent/uploads/2019/06/TripAdvisor-
Logo.png
2. Waze (http://www.waze.com)

Waze is a
community-driven GPS and
navigational app that
guides you through the
shortest route
possible while driving. It
works on a smartphone
and can help you find
directions and avoid traffic
jams. It provides real-time
directions that are
adjusted on-the-fly to
account for various types
of potential obstacles.
Developed by: Google ,
Original author(s): Waze
Mobile, Available in: 50
languages, License:
Commercial proprietary Photo Credit:
software https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/fc/
Logo_waze.png

3. Wikis

Wikis are applications allowing several people to collaborate, modify, extend, or


delete the contents or structure of a particular page devoted to a topic or content.
Unlike blogs, a wiki has no defined writer or author and has “little implicit structure,
allowing structure to emerge
according to the needs of the
users.
The most popular example of a
wiki is the online encyclopedia
Wikipedia. There are other wikis
devoted to certain thematic
interest of niche users or audience.

Photo Credit: Wikipedia


PEOPLE IN MEDIA

These people are media practitioners, they provide information coming from their
expert knowledge or first-hand experience of events.

These are people who manipulate behind the lens and pen. They use Text, Audio,
Visual, and Multimedia, to spread information and messages for the public. People
in media are those involved in the media forms that they are primarily engage in –
print, broadcast, film, new media, and gaming.
Types of Journalist by Medium: (People in Media)

1. Print Journalists – These are people who underwent training in journalism


writing. Equipped with the fundamental and significant knowledge and
strategies in writing news and stories based from real events in the
community; written for the people in the community. They generally report in
newspaper and magazine.

2. Photojournalists - They are physically and emotionally attached to their


highend cameras which they use to capture important scenes and events
from the surroundings which carry with it stories that give impact to the
society as a whole.

3. Broadcast Journalists - They are who we often see on television, giving us


updates on the local, national and world events. They are skilled not just in
journalism but also in public speaking.

4. Multimedia Journalists - They are the ones who have abilities in accessing,
evaluating and producing information using several forms of media. Mostly,
they make use of social networking sites to connect to the masses for easy
and wider dissemination of their reliable news stories.

People in Media People as Media Lower- end Media


Users
• Media practitioners • Media users • People with limited
• Experts • Well-oriented to access to media and
• Provide information • media sources and information.
to media users messages
Intermediaries,
provide information
to lower-end
media users.

Activity 2:
Instructions: Look at each picture below and identify the type of People as Media
shown in it. Describe this type of People as Media.

1. __________________________
____________________________________
____________________________________
____________________________________
____________________________________
____________________________________
____________________________________
____________________________________
____________________________________
____________________________________
__________________________________
Photo Credit:
https://www.cision.com/content/dam/cision
/Resources/white-
papers/WP_Social_Journalism_Report_3.png

2. __________________________
____________________________________
____________________________________
____________________________________
____________________________________
____________________________________
_______________________________

Photo Credit:
https://images.glaciermedia.ca/polopoly_fs/
1.23187120.1519827191!/fileImage/httpIm
age/image.png_gen/derivatives/landscape_8
04/4hth4.png

Activity 3: Compare and Define

Instructions:

Answer the questions inside the diagram below. Write the answers in your
notebook or answer sheet.
.
What is People in
What is People What are their
Media?
as Media? similarities?

Assessment
A. Multiple Choice Select the letter of the best answer from the given choices.
1. This refers to the persons that are involved in the use, analysis, evaluation and production of
media and information.
A. Media practitioners C. People Media
B. Online classroom teachers D. Editors
2. This refers to a leader for a certain group who gives details and information to lesser active
persons in the group.
A. Opinion leader C. Factual leader
B. Campus Journalism D. Crowdsourcing
3. People without professional journalism training can use the tools of modern technology and
the global distribution of the Internet to create, augment or fact-check media on their own
or in collaboration with others.
A. Campus Journalism C. Social Journalism
B. Network Journalism D. Citizen Journalism
4. They are the ones who have abilities in accessing, evaluating and producing information
using several forms of media.
A. Print Journalists C. Photo Journalists
B. Multimedia Journalists D. Broadcast Journalists
5. These are people who underwent training in journalism writing. Equipped with the
fundamental and significant knowledge and strategies in writing news and stories based
from real events in the community.
A. Print Journalists C. Photo Journalists
B. Multimedia Journalists D. Broadcast Journalists
6. They are skilled not just in journalism but also in public speaking.
A. Print Journalists C. Photo Journalists
B. Multimedia Journalists D. Broadcast Journalists
7. It is the practice of obtaining needed services, ideas, or content by soliciting contributions
from a large group of people and especially from the online community.
A. Social Journalism C. Citizen Journalism
B. Crowdsourcing D. Opinion Leaders
8. It is a community-driven GPS and navigational app that guides you through the shortest
route possible while driving.
A. Alibaba C. Wikipedia
B. Trip Advisor D. Waze
9. Here the journalists are using social media to make their content available to more people.
A. Citizen Journalism C. Opinion Leaders
B. Social Journalism D. Crowdsourcing
10.These are applications allowing several people to collaborate, modify, extend, or delete the
contents or structure of a particular page devoted to a topic or content.
A. Wikis C. Trip Advisor
B. Alibaba D. Waze

B. True or False: Write True if the statement is correct otherwise write False.
__________1. Limited effects paradigm believes that you are highly capable of discerning propaganda
and that media has limited capacity to persuade you.
__________2. Messages didn’t shape the way you think and behave so you should be aware of the extent
of the influence of this messages and the covert ways that they influence you.
__________ 3. The two-step flow theory explains the role of opinion leaders in developing consciousness
among lower-end users of media.

__________ 4. Crowdsourcing happen when a group of people or a crowd is solicited for information by
certain entities or institutions.

__________ 5. The most popular example of a wiki is the online encyclopedia Wikipedia.

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