When television became the dominant medium it changed everything. It changed how we arranged our furniture. It changed how families interacted, how politics are conducted, how religious denominations communicated, and even how we think and what we know. Now the “new media” revolution is changing everything again!
Today there is no way to tell facts from fiction. And it’s all too easy to select only the channels or websites or blogs that reinforce our preconceived biases. Whatever’s easy and satisfying. There is so much information out there that it’s easy to become helplessly confused. What is really going on in Afghanistan anyway? I get news reports everyday and I still don’t know!
I need to be my own editor but I don’t know what that means, or how. And what’s more, no one has yet shown me the need… convincingly. Well, the need is now, and it’s getting serious!
We are becoming a polarized society, and it’s too easy to fall into the trap of feeding our own narrow beliefs. Solving real problems requires knowing and respecting all sides of all issues. It requires being able to represent our cause, but then when the time comes to cooperate in taking steps to move the society forward. The concept of “compromise now and eventually win the day” has been lost.
Early in my academic career I launched an initiative called “The Media Project,” which sought to show the public just how television was changing everything. I spoke to teacher in-service conferences urging them to add units of study on media literacy in their humanities and social studies courses. I spoke to parent-teacher organizations urging them to teach intelligent uses of television at home. Turn it on, but also turn it off! I asked school systems to consider adding whole courses on the topic. All of this was aimed to simply get people to understand the power of media, and how to manage its use in their own lives.
Since then my life moved off in the direction of helping organizations make themselves better understood. This route required accepting the realities of how media revolutions change everything, and then figuring out how to cut through all this information clutter with a unified message. It’s not easy. And only partial success is ever possible, and even that takes intensive interactive communication over time.
When I put my academic hat back on today I find myself once again thinking we still need a nationwide media literacy eduction program. In fact, we need it more than ever. We need it in our public and private schools, as a part of the core curricula in universities, and maybe even offered and promoted by the media itself.
Only a better educated public can make democracy work. And it is becoming more and more clear to me every day that understanding how media influences and changes everything should be a vital part of everyone’s education. And it’s not just the programming content, it’s the constant use of the technology itself that changes how everything works around it.
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