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Students will understand the following:
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For this lesson, you will need:
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Cut the list of news sources in half. Limit the written reports to summaries; that is, do not ask for statements of implications of the study. |
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You can evaluate your students on their written work using the following three-point rubric: Three points: well-written summary of how the media differed in their reports of the news event; comprehensive statement of the implications of the study; error-free grammar, usage, and mechanics Two points: adequate summary of how the media differed in their reports of the news event; acceptable statement of the implications of the study; some errors in grammar, usage, and mechanics One point: inadequate summary of how the media differed in their reports of the news event; weak statement of the implications of the study; many errors in grammar, usage, and mechanics |
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Public Opinion What are the perceptions of the media by people in your classroom, school, and community? In the Discovery videotape, Walter Cronkite refers to a survey of media perception administered by the Los Angeles Times Mirror Center for the People and the Press. Using some of the same questions asked in that survey, have your students poll people they know. Then ask students to work together to compile data to see how their respondents' opinions compare or contrast with the opinions of the national sample mentioned in the video. Ask students what might account for similarities and differences. Conclude this project by asking students to speculate on how news reporting will differ in 5, 10, and 20 years. Community Reader or Leader? Public journalism—reporters taking community-activist roles—is becoming increasingly popular and increasingly controversial. Ask students to research any public journalism programs in your area. Ask them to find out, for example, if a television station is promoting, say, volunteer opportunities or if newspapers are asking businesses to take an active role in, say, education. Then raise the question of whether your own school newspaper promotes causes as well as reports on them. To conclude this project, ask students to write a letter to an editor or a station manager about the positive or negative effects of the media's taking stands rather than simply reporting news. |
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Sensational TV: Trash or Journalism? Nancy Day, Enslow, 1996 This new book for young adults covers all of the formats of television news, including talk shows, magazine format television programs, and reality simulation TV programs, to uncover the extent of sensationlism versus truth. "A Bad Case of the Blues" David Whitman, U.S. News and World Report, March 4, 1996 Does the news always have to be bad? How can we know otherwise? This article explores indicators to contradict the sorry social conditions frequently portrayed by television news programming. On the Air: Behind the Scenes at a TV Newscast Esther Hautzig, Manmillan, 1991 The planning, presentation, and compilation of a typical television news program is explained and illustrated for younger readers in this book. How TV Changed America's Mind Edward Wakin, Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Books, 1996 The author, a professor of communications at Fordham University (New York) and a business communications consultant, offers a learned expose of the impact of television news broadcasting on the collective American mind. |
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Television News Archive at Vanderbilt University This site houses a database of abstracts from every national nightly news broadcast since 1968. Minorities and Women in Television News Provides research information about the participation and involvement of women and minorities in television news media. |
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Click on any of the vocabulary words below to hear them pronounced and used in a sentence.
Context: This technological earthquake changed the information landscape cataclysmically.
Context: We have a diminishing and monopolistic print medium on one hand.
Context: Peoples' doubt that they are getting the truth can turn to cynicism.
Context: Most of it, it seems to me, is terribly delinquent in covering the important news of the community.
Context: The tabloids . . . salacious and sensational; in my opinion, of little redeeming social value.
Context: They must be considered for their insidious impact upon the mainstream media.
Context: The idea that everybody in the news business has to now pander to the lowest common denominator is a very unhealthy development.
Context: When you get to the egregious stuff that's now on the air, particularly these talk shows, which really are the modern equivalent of bear baiting or cock fighting...
Context: Talk shows on television. Talk shows on radio. They're very easy to listen to, and they get people stirred up, and it is a visceral thrill, but it's not informative; it's not enlightening.
Context: The difficulty of being a citizen in the United States of America is that there is such a vast panoply of information out there.
Context: Pressure on the news room to meet economic goals is consistent, persistent, and invidious.
Context: We now find more frequently pejorative adjectives.
Context: We see ourselves as a catalyst, or the connecting mechanism, in a community.
Context: Thus will the public be armed against the demagogues who use distortion and misinformation to twist democracy to their own profit.
Context: Democracy is a mockery if it is left only to an autocracy of the informed. |
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This lesson plan may be used to address the academic standards listed below. These standards are drawn from Content Knowledge: A Compendium of Standards and Benchmarks for K-12 Education: 2nd Edition and have been provided courtesy of theMid-continent Research for Education and Learningin Aurora, Colorado. Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: language arts Standard: Effectively gathers and uses information for research purposes. Benchmarks: Makes in-depth analyses of the validity and reliability of primary source information and uses information accordingly in reporting on a research topic. Uses a variety of news sources to gather information for research purposes (e.g., newspapers, news magazines, TV, radio, videotapes, artifacts). Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: language arts Standard: Demonstrates competence in the general skills and strategies for reading information. Benchmarks: Reorganizes the concepts and details in informational texts in new ways and describes the advantages and disadvantages of the new organization. Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: language arts Standard: Demonstrates competence in applying the reading process to specific types of informational texts. Benchmarks: Understands the defining features and structure of news stories at this developmental level. Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: language arts Standard: Demonstrates an understanding of the nature and function of the English language. Benchmarks: Compares form, meaning, and value of different kinds of language. Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: civics Standard: Understands the importance of political leadership, public service, and a knowledgeable citizenry in American constitutional democracy. Benchmarks: Understands why becoming knowledgeable about public affairs and the values and principles of American constitutional democracy, and communicating that knowledge to others are important forms of participation, and understands the argument that constitutional democracy requires the participation of an attentive, knowledgeable, and competent citizenry. Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: the arts Standard: Understands how informal and formal theatre, film, television, and electronic media productions create and communicate meaning. Benchmarks: Knows how social meanings (aural, oral, and visual symbols with personal and/or social significance) communicated in informal productions, formal productions, and personal performances of different cultures and historical periods can relate to current personal, national and international issues. Knows how varying collaborative efforts and artistic choices can affect the performance of informal and formal productions. Grade level: 9-12 Subject area: the arts Standard: Understands the context in which theatre, film, television, and electronic media are performed today as well as in the past. Benchmarks: Understands ways in which personal and cultural experiences can affect an artist's presentation. |
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Ilene Berman, English teacher, Sidwell Friends School, Washington, D.C. |
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