Teaching English And Media Education
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Abstract
The media, especially television, is the main means of cultural transmission in our society and it is well attested fact that many students spend more hours in front of TV screen than they do in a class room Media education seeks to increase children’s critical understanding of the media – namely, television, film, radio, photography, popular music, printed materials, and computer software. How they work, how they produce meaning, how they are organised and how audiences make sense of them, and the issues that media education addresses. It aims to develop systematically children’s critical and creative powers through analysis and production of media artefacts. This also depends their understanding of the pleasure and enjoyment provided by the media. Media education aims to create more active and critical media users who will demand, and could contribute to, a greater range and diversity of media products.
Key word: teaching English, media education
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Adrian Doff, Christopher Jones and keith Mitchel. 1986. Meaning into words. London: Cambridge University Press.
Barry Tomaly and Susan Stepleksi. 2002. Culturall Awarness, Lonson: Oxford University.
Buckingham, David. 2003. Media Education Literacy, Learning, and contemporary Culture. Polity Press: London
Goodwyn, Andrew. 1992. English Teaching and Media Education. Open University Press: University of Virginia.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.30998/deiksis.v5i01.459
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