Difference between revisions of "NMLC-fake-news"
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=DIGITAL ENGagement Conference= | =DIGITAL ENGagement Conference= | ||
− | ===Center for Worker Education--CUNY=== | + | ====Center for Worker Education--CUNY==== |
− | + | ==25 Broadway / New York N.Y.== | |
− | ==sponsored by the M.S. program in Media Studies at Brooklyn College== | + | ===sponsored by the M.S. program in Media Studies at Brooklyn College=== |
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This page also linked from: http://tinyurl.com/ccsu-fake-news | This page also linked from: http://tinyurl.com/ccsu-fake-news | ||
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Revision as of 18:31, 1 May 2017
Contents
DIGITAL ENGagement Conference
Center for Worker Education--CUNY
25 Broadway / New York N.Y.
sponsored by the M.S. program in Media Studies at Brooklyn College
This page also linked from: http://tinyurl.com/ccsu-fake-news
This is a update of a page originally created for a breakout session of the Northeast Media Literacy Conference: The Past, Present and Future of Media Literacy Education held on Sat., Feb. 4, 2017 at Central Connecticut State University in New Britain, Conn. You can listen to AUDIO of Fake News plenary on Feb. 4. You can also view Notes of plenary-session discussion as well as Notes of subsequent breakout sessions. The session in Connecticut was called: Defining the Fake News Moment: Fiction, Fad, Fatal or Media Lit Opportunity?. Participants were Katherine Fry, Allison Butler, Mellisa Zimdars and Bill Densmore.
What do we mean by 'fake news'?"
"Fake news" -- A metaphor for all that ails our media ecosystem?
THE RESULTS:
In the last six months, our political discourse has been infected by a new term: “Fake News.” In a 45-minute, circle-round session, we’ll probe the limits of what the term might mean, and how it might be an opportunity to mainstream media-literacy education. We’ll drive toward a consensus statement, addressing such questions as: How do current concepts of “fake” news differ from what was published by 18th-century pamphleteers, or 1960s supermarket tabloids? Is news “fake” based on point of view only, or because it reports as facts things that are demonstrably untrue? Is it only “fake” if its intention is to mislead? Who defines “mislead?” In an age when all of us can be reporters via our Facebook feed, do we all need tutoring on how to create — and consume — trustworthy reporting and information? In social media, is news now anything more than verified gossip? Who is the trusted verifier? Our “conversation catalysts” will start the discussion, then we’ll invite all to to participate.
“It’s the biggest crisis facing our democracy, the failing business model of real journalism,” Senator Claire McCaskill, Democrat of Missouri and a longtime critic of fake news, told me on Saturday. Ms. McCaskill said that “journalism is partly to blame” for being slow to adjust as the internet turned its business model upside down and social media opened the competitive floodgates. “Fake news got way out ahead of them,” she said.
Also see: Frank Romano (RIT emeritus) published, 1990 in TypeWorld: "We are the Press"
CONVENING QUESTIONS:
What consensus statement can we reach about news, trust, community and citizenship in a media-literate society?
Our “conversation catalysts” will include:
- Katherine Fry, a journalism scholar and co-founder of a media literacy organization who teaches graduate media-literacy education at CUNY-Brooklyn
- Allison Butler, who runs the media-literacy certificate program and teaches at UMass Amherst
- Mellisa Zimdars, assistant professor of communication and media at Merrimack College who is working with a team of librarians and computer programmers to create tools for navigating “news” websites through an OpenSources project called Melissa's List
- Joined by Bill Densmore, a director of Journalism That Matters and a research fellow of the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute at the Missouri School of Journalism.
After the plenary discussion, Bulter, Fry and Zimdars will each lead half-hour, deeper-dive breakouts.
ACCESS BACKGROUND MATERIALS
BELOW FROM: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/11/opinion/online-and-scared.html
EXCERPT FROM A COLUMN BY THOMAS FRIEDMAN:
It’s a huge legal, moral and strategic problem, and it will require . . . “a new social compact” to defuse.
Work on that compact has to start with every school teaching children digital civics. And that begins with teaching them that the internet is an open sewer of untreated, unfiltered information, where they need to bring skepticism and critical thinking to everything they read and basic civic decency to everything they write.
A Stanford Graduate School of Education study published in November found “a dismaying inability by students to reason about information they see on the internet. Students, for example, had a hard time distinguishing advertisements from news articles or identifying where information came from. … One assessment required middle schoolers to explain why they might not trust an article on financial planning that was written by a bank executive and sponsored by a bank. The researchers found that many students did not cite authorship or article sponsorship as key reasons for not believing the article.”
Prof. Sam Wineburg, the lead author of the report, said: “Many people assume that because young people are fluent in social media they are equally perceptive about what they find there. Our work shows the opposite to be true.”
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