Scrutinizing the Cybersell

My professor wrote a fabulous article, Scrutinizing the Cybersell,  that put Media Literacy into perspective.  Everyone should read it.  After reading the article, I feel enlightened on where Dr. Crovitz is coming from (pardon ending in preposition). I wasn’t looking forward to reading the article, considering the mound of homework I have stacked on my kitchen table. However, after reading it, I see the importance of utilizing how students are already being marketed as a way to teach literacy. It makes good sense. It reminds me of the saying, “If Mohammad won’t come to the mountain, the mountain will go to Mohammad.” We have to meet students on their turf, where they feel comfortable and have a knowledge base. Scaffolding. They KNOW the Internet. They KNOW fast-food and the cool web-sites. Meet them on their ground and teach from there.

One part of the article that really struck me was on the second page. Dr. Crovitz wrote that “young people are skeptical of adults who attempt to use ‘hip’ language”. By marketing our students through the Internet, advertisers, promoters, and marketers get a free pass into our students lives, and the students aren’t even aware they are being manipulated. I get the concept finally of why this class is so important. It’s not just about bringing technology into the classroom and teaching through blogs and wikis, but it’s also about the dangers and ruthlessness of the advertisers that have our students in the crosshairs. Teaching them media literacy gets us all on common ground, empowers them against being a means to end, and teaches critical thinking. It’s a win win for everyone.

Crazy is as Englishmistress does

So there is so much going on.  There are so many projects in there air, projects to work on, projects to think about, etc…  I just can’t keep up.  I get on line when I am able to find resources such as videos, web-sites, and other information that will be useful to me now and in the future, but I waste so much time casting off unusable blogs, web-sites, podcasts, and videos that my time is wasted.  The only positive thing I can say is that I am looking at everything I come across with the lens of a teacher: how can I use this video or this resource in my future class with my own students.  I have gained more comfort level with technology, but, for better or worse, at this stage that “teacher’s lens” is the best thing I’ve managed to acquire.

The other day I found a great video on YouTube and went to Vixy   to convert the file so I could upload it to TeacherTube.  It took forever to convert, and now I can’t find the file and don’t have the time to search for it on my computer.  I don’t even know where to find it. 

I’m just venting.  I added two new pages to this blog: “Inspirational quotes” and other resources so they wouldn’t collect dust and clutter my home page.  I’m still tinkering with the new pages, trying to get certain posts to fit in where I need them.  Technology is a mixed blessing.