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Media For Teaching

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Can you teach without any teaching devices?!
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Page 1: Media For Teaching

Can you teach without any teaching devices?!

Page 2: Media For Teaching

TEACHER’S ADVANTAGES OF USING TEACHING DEVICES

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1. Using concrete objects and materials actually being used everyday together with common items for home, school and community makes learning real and true-to-life.

2. Infrastructure like tall buildings, houses and bridges can be reduced in size and details are viewed in the form of miniatures or models. Spacecrafts, rockets, satellites and modern means of transportation could be in the form of models.

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3. Microorganisms and other minute organs are best studied through a microscope or hand lens.

4. Great world events and technological breakthroughs such as landing on the moon could be recorded by a powerful cameras and films are projected as in video machines.

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5. Instructions that could be carried out through reading are facilitated by the availability of professional books, magazines, journals and national and international publications.

6. Information about locations, directions, sizes and shapes of landforms could be presented in replicas like globes, maps and mock-ups.

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7. Internal organs could be examined by using equipment like scanners, ultrasound gadgets and endoscopy machines.

8. Simple lessons on art production are illustrated through famous paintings, artworks and sculptures. They are helpful in developing the values of nationalism and appreciation of outstanding works of artist.

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9. Literary pieces in the form of poems, outstanding essays and novels are used for motivation purposes and in developing love for reading and fondness for books.

10. Electronic devices and equipment like computers, cellular phones, VCD and DVD players afford valuable technical and scientific assistance.

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CLASSIFICATION OFTEACHING DEVICES

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1. REPRESENTATION OR REPLICAS• Globes• Maps• Diorama• Models• Miniature of large objects

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2. PREPARED SET-UP• Aquarium• Terrarium• Planetariums• Home of animals• Mini weather station• Veranda• Launch Pad

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3. SIMULATION USING FIGURES• Historic events and places• Famous plays and dramatization• Strategies employed for outdoor and indoor games• Space exploration• Landing on the moon

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4. REAL OBJECTS• Chemicals• Electrical tools• Construction materials• Garden tools• Live pets• Potted plants• Other living organism

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5. EXHIBITS• Life cycle of insects• Mounted insects• Pressed leaves and flowers• Preserved specimens• Original investigation• Bottled garden• Projects

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6. COLLECTIONS• Classified collection of shells, gems, minerals, seeds, books• Collection of favorite poems, greeting cards, letters and famous essay• Ceramic like vases, figurines• Musical instruments

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7. PUBLICATIONS AND OTHER PRINTED MATERIALS

• Books, pocketbooks, novels, dictionaries, magazines, journals, pamphlets, autobiographies, biographies, diaries, bulletins, memoranda, ordinances, literary pieces, original poems, short stories, clippings of historic events, celebrations, national songs and operas, famous speeches and oratorical pieces

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8. ARTWORK• Paintings of famous artist• Students’ painting• Sculptures, carvings, molds• Busts, trophies• Winning photographs• Fashion pieces, embroideries

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9. LABORATORY EQUIPMENTS• Microscope, scanners• Dissecting set• Camera, heat sources, lighting fixtures• Mounting kit• Glasswares• Silverwares• Measuring devices• Calculators

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10. ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT AND DEVICES• Computers and networking equipments• Television sets• Projectors• VCD players• DVD players• Tapes• Films• Slides• Discs

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Presented by:FOR-IAN V. SANDOVAL

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EDUCATION TODAY AND TOMORROW…

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What is a MEDIUM/MEDIA?• is any intervening means, instrument or agency• is a material used• use to denote a method• is a means of communicating information

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EXPERTS ON“MEDIA EDUCATION”,

“MEDIA STUDY”OR “MEDIA LITERACY”?

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MEDIA EDUCATION a broad description of all that takes place in a media-oriented classroom, whether the subject matter is English, history, geography or science.

Chris Worsnop

MEDIA STUDY occurs when schools or teachers organize specific courses or units to study the media.

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MEDIA LITERACY is the expected outcome from work in either media education or media study. The more you learn about or through the media, the more media literacy you have. Media literacy is the skill of experiencing, interpreting/analyzing and making media products.

Chris Worsnop

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MEDIA EDUCATION is an ongoing process, which can develop and evolve.

Neil Andersen

MEDIA LITERACY is a quality, like a tan, which can be achieved.

e.g. "Every day, my media education is getting more powerful."

e.g. "Yo! Check it out! I am media literate!"

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MEDIA EDUCATION encourages a probing approach to the world of media: Who is this message intended for? Who wants to reach this audience, and why? From whose perspective is this story told? Whose voices are heard, and whose are absent? What strategies does this message use to get my attention and make me feel included?

Jane Tallim

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MEDIA LITERACY is the ability to sift through and analyze the messages that inform, entertain and sell to us every day. It's the ability to bring critical thinking skills to bear on all media - from music videos and Web environments to product placement in films and virtual displays.

Jane Tallim

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MEDIA LITERACY is an informed, critical understanding of the mass media. It involves examining the techniques, technologies and institutions involved in media production; being able to critically analyze media messages; and recognizing the role audiences play in making meaning from those messages.

Rick Shepherd

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MEDIA LITERACY seeks to empower citizens and to transform their passive relationship to media into an active, critical engagement - capable of challenging the traditions and structures of a privatized, commercial media culture, and finding new avenues of citizen speech and discourse.

Wally Bowen

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MEDIA EDUCATION/MEDIA LITERACY • is the ability to access, analyze, evaluate and communicate or create messages in a wide variety of media modes, genres and format• is an expanded information and communication skill that is responsive to the changing nature of information in our society

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MEDIA EDUCATION/MEDIA LITERACY • the skills, competencies and abilities the students must have in the 21st century and the challenges of the global economy• encourages people to ask questions about what they watch, see and read

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3 STAGES OF MEDIA LITERACY1. Becoming aware of the importance of managing one’s media “diet”2. Learning specific skills of critical viewing -

learning to analyze and question what is in the frame, how it is constructed and what may have been left out

3. Behind the frame to explore deeper issues

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SOME CONCEPTS AND PRINCIPLES OF

MEDIA LITERACY

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1. All media are construction2. The media construct reality3. Audiences negotiate meaning in the media4. Media have a commercial implications5. Media contain ideological and value messages6. Media has social and political implications7. Form and content are closely related in media8. Each medium has aesthetic form

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WHY TEACH MEDIA LITERACY?

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1. We live in a mediated environment2. It emphasizes critical thinking3. It makes you a better citizen or part of being a

educated citizen4. It promotes active participation in a media-

saturated environment5. It helps us to understand communication

technologies

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7. It influence8. It teaches us of democracy9. For PR (Public Relation)10. It increase the importance of visual information and communication

6. It has been integrated into all subject areas from K-12

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13. It is the storytellers of our generation14. It help to prepare students for life in the society

12. Education for future

11. To eliminate the growing privatization of information

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NINE FACTORS THATWILL MAKE MEDIA LITERACY

FLOURISH

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1. Media literacy, like other innovative programs, must be a grass-roots movement. Teachers need to take the initiative in lobbying for its inclusion in the curriculum.

2. Educational authorities must give clear support to such programs by mandating the teaching of Media Studies within the curriculum; establishing guidelines and resource books; ensuring that curricula are developed; and making certain materials available.

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3. Faculties of education must hire staff capable of training future teachers in this area. There should also be academic support from tertiary institutions in the writing of curricula and in sustained consultation.

4. In-service training at the school district level must be an integral part of program implementation.

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5. School districts need consultants who have expertise in media literacy, and who will establish communication networks.

6. Suitable textbooks and audio-visual materials, which are relevant to the country and/or area, must be available.

7. There must be appropriate evaluation instruments suitable to the unique attributes of Media Studies.

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8. A support organization must be established for the purposes of workshops, conferences, dissemination of newsletters, and developing curriculum units. Such a professional organization must cut across school boards and districts to involve a cross-section of people interested in media literacy.

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9. Because media literacy involves such a diversity of skills and expertise, there must be collaboration between teachers, parents, researchers and media professionals.

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INTEGRATING MEDIAINTO THE CLASSROOM

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• English / Language Arts• History / Social Studies• Science• Family Studies• Health or Physical Education• Music• Law• Mathematics

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STREAMINGMEDIA

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• A technology that is overtaking in the Internet• A method of making audio, video and other

multimedia available in real-time over the Internet or corporate intranets, with no download wait and no file to take up space on your hard disk

• Real Networks

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IP Packets

Cache

Cache

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SOME USESSTREAMING MEDIA

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• Advertisement• Internet Radio Stations• Movie Trailers• Broadcasting• Video Conferencing• Presentation Distribution• Video Capture Transmission

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BETTER-KNOWN INTERNET SITES THAT SUPPORT STREAMING MEDIA

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• Yahoo.com• Broadcast.com• CNN.com• ABC.com• Bloomberg.com

•ESPN.com•BroadcastAmerica.com•MTV.com•VH1.com•FOXNEWS.com

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WHAT PLAYERSARE AVAILABLE?

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REAL PLAYER

• RealJukebox• RealDownload• RealPresenter• RealProducer• RealServerhttp://www.real.com

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WINDOWS MEDIA PLAYER

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ORBIT

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FLV Player

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“Cinema, radio, television, magazines are a school of inattention: people look without seeing, listen in without hearing.”

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ENRICHMENT ACTIVITIES 8

Instructions:1. Choose & watch a media (movie) related in

your teaching profession.2. Create a movie review presentation with the

following contents:a. Title slide including the movie poster as backgroundb. Short summary of the film including the characters

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ENRICHMENT ACTIVITIES 8

Instructions:c. Moral values/ issues / other issues

3. Upload the Presentation file in ww.slideshare.net


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