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Featured Item:

 Media Literacy is Elementary

Media Literacy is Elementary:  Teaching Youth to Critically Read and Create Media, By Jeff Share

A compelling case for helping our youngest students begin media literacy “as early as possible.”

Read all about it and Purchase Here

 

National Organizational Members

     Cable in the Classroom
     www.ciconline.org

 

Founded in 1989, Cable in the Classroom (CIC) is the U.S. cable industry’s non-profit education foundation.  Working in partnership with and on behalf of the cable industry, CIC advocates for the visionary, sensible and effective use of media in homes, schools, and communities.

With so much of our work involving media, CIC has been an active advocate for media literacy for more than 15 years, supporting publications and research, convening meetings and conferences, speaking and presenting workshops.  See the Media Smart section of our website for more details.

Contact Frank Gallagher




 

   Center for Media Literacy
   www.medialit.org


The Center for Media Literacy provides leadership, training and curriculum consulting around the CML MediaLit Kit™ -- a national Framework for Learning and Teaching in a Media World with the Five Core Concepts and Five Key Questions of Media Literacy at its focus. You’ll find it all on our website along with:

  • Literacy for the 21st Century – a plain language explanation of media literacy theory and pedagogy.
  • Five Key Questions that Can Change the World -- 25 cornerstone lesson plans -- five for each of the Five Key Questions.
  • Media Literacy Works! – a growing collection of success stories and case studies.
  • CML Reading Room -- A collection of articles and original source documents, including a decade-by-decade history of media literacy in the US
  • Archive of Media&Values magazine (1977-1993) -- over 350 articles containing the seeds of today's US media literacy movement.

Contact:  Tessa Jolls


 

    Common Sense Media
     www.commonsensemedia.org


Common Sense Media is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization dedicated to helping families find the media that’s right for them.  Our “consumer reports” type guide is a free, one-stop resource for kids’ and family media. We have detailed reviews and ratings, recommended lists, and tips on how to talk to kids about Internet safety, body image, media violence, commercialism, and other critical media topics. 

In addition to using the materials we've designed for educators, teachers can use the Common Sense Media website as part of an interactive media literacy curriculum that encourages students to think critically about media content.

Students can watch a movie or read a book reviewed on our website, discuss the content and messages conveyed, then write and submit their own reviews to our site. This is an engaging way for students to think critically about media, dialogue with their peers, and discuss media’s impact on youth and society.  

Contact: Rebecca Randall


 


   Just Think   
   www.justthink.org



Just Think teaches young people to lead healthy, responsible, independent lives in a culture highly impacted by media. Through our work, young people learn to:

  • Gain leadership abilities
  • Improve their academic performance
  • Make sound and healthy behavior decisions
  • Acquire practical workplace tools
  • Enhance their consumer choices
  • Engage positively with their peers, parents, educators, and community
  • Think for themselves 
Our innovative programs target underserved Bay Area communities and offer engaging workshops for classroom and after-school settings. We also develop dynamic curricula aligned with state/national standards that give educators creative tools to connect with youth. These include:
  • Changing the World Through Media Education, a best-selling media literacy guidebook
  • Hidden Heroes, an innovative approach to youth storytelling
  • Flipping the Script, a ground-breaking Hip-Hop curriculum kit

Sign up for our eNewsletter or email us at: think@justthink.org



   
    Me
dia Awareness Network
     www.media-awareness.ca

Media Awareness Network (MNet) is a Canadian organization that's dedicated to supporting and encouraging media and Internet education and its widest possible integration into schools, homes and communities. MNet's award-winning Web site features a wide range of media education resources - in English and French.

For an overview of everything MNet has to offer parents, teachers, librarians, researchers and others, take a site tour or check out the site directory.  For educators, MNet's Teachers section provides "one-stop shopping" for the classroom - including a Lesson Library with links to hundreds of lessons, games and activities, an overview of media literacy that offers practical suggestions for making media education happen, a province-by-province overview of media education in Canada, a Web Awareness section to help teachers respond to Internet issues affecting youth, and a resource section that includes Barry's Bulletin - a popular culture digest written by Canadian media education guru, Barry Duncan.


 

Academic Centers and Programs

Local/State/Regional Groups