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Showing 1 - 17 of 17 matches in All Departments
The chapters in this component of Assessing Media Education are valuable for those who need to know how to develop an assessment plan.
This book, part of the BEA Electronic Media Research Series, brings together top scholars researching media literacy and lays out the current state of the field in areas such as propaganda, news, participatory culture, representation, education, social/environmental justice, and civic engagement. The field of media literacy continues to undergo changes and challenges as audiences are reconceptualized and reconfigured, media industries are transformed and replaced, and the production of media texts is available to anyone with a smartphone. The book provides an overview of these. It offers readers specific examples and recommendations to help others as they develop their own teaching and research agendas. Media Literacy in a Disruptive Media Environment will be of great interest to scholars and graduate students studying media literacy through the lens of broadcasting, communication studies, media and cultural studies, film, and digital media studies.
To Be Honest is a play script and series of essays reflecting on the ways Muslims are perceived and spoken of in America. With funding from a Mellon Foundation grant, several professors conducted more than two hundred hours of qualitative interviews in Texas with people across religious and political spectrums. Their conversations confirm expected polarizations and reveal new, troubling perspectives. To Be Honest is a âdocumentary theaterâ script born from these interviews, which were used to help create monologues that give a face to the nuanced complexity of what is rarely said aloud. The monologues touch on non-Muslim millennialsâ understandings of Islam, racismâs intersection with Islamophobia, the fatigue of âactivistâ Muslims, the impact of intervention in the Middle East on U.S. military veterans, feminist readings of the hijab, the Trump presidency, and more. Six essays contextualize the scriptâs underlying themes and provide material for further study. In these polarizing times, To Be Honest illuminates the striking reality that Americans have vastly different experiences with Islam, from evangelicals who work to convert Muslims with the aim of âhelping them achieve peaceâ to Muslim youth who struggle to make sense of why society dissects their religion. Students, scholars, readers, and theatergoers will come away with insights that allow them to move beyond limited views of Islam by listening to and engaging with others. To Be Honest is an important script for staging and a valuable tool for dialogue across ideological perspectives.
This book provides academic reformers with a blueprint for tackling the upheaval facing media education. It calls for a new professionalism that rejects the status quo, reflects the mission and diversity of individual programs, and demands a redefinition of both traditional media studies and the liberal arts.
Assessing media education is a formidable task because both assessment and media education are complex and controversial concepts. Assessment, which can take place at the individual student, class, sequence, program, department or unit, and university levels, is questioned in terms of reliability, validity, relevance, and cost. Media education, which has been challenged at a number of schools, finds faculty and administrators in the midst of soul-searching about how to clearly articulate its missions and purposes to a broader audience. Departments are under increasing national, state, and institutional pressure to get assessment procedures carried out quickly, but there is an obvious danger in rushing to implement assessment strategies before establishing what is essential in media education. In communication education in general, the "what" of assessment is often discussed in terms of skills, attitudes, affect, values, and knowledge. People assess students to determine what they know, think, feel, value, and can do. Here it is suggested that one of the places to start defining what students should learn from their media education is by identifying outcomes. Outcomes can be assessed in a variety of ways, but first they need to be developed and clearly articulated.
Assessing Media Education provides guidelines for media educators and administrators in higher education media programs who are creating or improving student-learning assessment strategies. Covering the topics and categories established by the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications, this key resource guides readers through the steps of developing an assessment plan, establishing student learning outcomes in the various areas of the curriculum, and measuring those outcomes. This timely and critical volume provides detailed discussion on: developing an assessment plan, placing special emphasis on mission statements; the development of student-learning outcomes, with chapters reflecting the eleven competencies presented in the ACEJMC requirements; and indirect and direct measures of student-learning outcomes, ranging from advisory boards to examinations. The volume concludes with case studies of programs at different points in their development of student outcomes, illustrating the implementation of assessment plans in a variety of contexts.
"Assessing Media Education" provides guidelines for media educators
and administrators in higher education media programs who are
creating or improving student-learning assessment strategies.
Covering the topics and categories established by the Accrediting
Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications, this
key resource guides readers through the steps of developing an
assessment plan, establishing student learning outcomes in the
various areas of the curriculum, and measuring those outcomes.
This book addresses many of the issues facing new and seasoned
communication and media administrators. Though there are
business-oriented management and leadership books, there is no
handbook--to the editor's knowledge--that emphasizes academic
administration. This book fills an important gap in the literature
by providing--in one place--interesting, important, and useful
information that will help administrators by anticipating problems
and suggesting strategies for the variety of challenges they face.
Assessing media education is a formidable task because both
assessment and media education are complex and controversial
concepts. Assessment, which can take place at the individual
student, class, sequence, program, department or unit, and
university levels, is questioned in terms of reliability, validity,
relevance, and cost. Media education, which has been challenged at
a number of schools, finds faculty and administrators in the midst
of soul-searching about how to clearly articulate its missions and
purposes to a broader audience.
The chapters in this component of Assessing Media Education are valuable for those who need to know how to develop an assessment plan.
This component of Assessing Media Education is intended for those who would like to know how other schools have grappled with implementing assessment initiatives, and who have used assessment to improve their programs.
Designed as a handbook, this text provides media, speech (public
speaking, interpersonal, small group, and organizational
communication), and theatre educators with both the theoretical and
practical ammunition to fight the assessment battles on their
campuses. The philosophical implications of accountability are
balanced with concrete, specific, and usable assessment strategies.
Stressing student, faculty, course, program, department, and
institutional assessment, this book's aim is to provide, in one
place, information that will help diverse and complex communication
programs face the growing challenges in assessment.
Designed as a handbook, this text provides media, speech (public
speaking, interpersonal, small group, and organizational
communication), and theatre educators with both the theoretical and
practical ammunition to fight the assessment battles on their
campuses. The philosophical implications of accountability are
balanced with concrete, specific, and usable assessment strategies.
Stressing student, faculty, course, program, department, and
institutional assessment, this book's aim is to provide, in one
place, information that will help diverse and complex communication
programs face the growing challenges in assessment.
This book provides academic reformers with a blueprint for tackling
the upheaval facing media education. It calls for a new
professionalism that rejects the status quo, reflects the mission
and diversity of individual programs, and demands a redefinition of
both traditional media studies and the liberal arts.
"Assessing Media Education" provides guidelines for media educators
and administrators in higher education media programs who are
creating or improving student-learning assessment strategies.
Covering the topics and categories established by the Accrediting
Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications, this
key resource guides readers through the steps of developing an
assessment plan, establishing student learning outcomes in the
various areas of the curriculum, and measuring those outcomes.
This book addresses many of the issues facing new and seasoned
communication and media administrators. Though there are
business-oriented management and leadership books, there is no
handbook--to the editor's knowledge--that emphasizes academic
administration. This book fills an important gap in the literature
by providing--in one place--interesting, important, and useful
information that will help administrators by anticipating problems
and suggesting strategies for the variety of challenges they face.
This book, part of the BEA Electronic Media Research Series, brings together top scholars researching media literacy and lays out the current state of the field in areas such as propaganda, news, participatory culture, representation, education, social/environmental justice, and civic engagement. The field of media literacy continues to undergo changes and challenges as audiences are reconceptualized and reconfigured, media industries are transformed and replaced, and the production of media texts is available to anyone with a smartphone. The book provides an overview of these. It offers readers specific examples and recommendations to help others as they develop their own teaching and research agendas. Media Literacy in a Disruptive Media Environment will be of great interest to scholars and graduate students studying media literacy through the lens of broadcasting, communication studies, media and cultural studies, film, and digital media studies.
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