Report Navigation
- Foreword
- Statement of the Co-Chairs
- Executive Summary
- Introduction
- Part I: What are the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy?
- Part II: Commission Findings and Recommended Strategies
- A. Maximizing the Availability of Relevant and Credible Information
- Information Ecologies
- Communities Need Strong Information Intermediaries
- Journalism Is Essential to Community Health
- The Changing Face of Journalism
- Local Nonprofits Can Also Perform Some Journalistic Functions
- Public Access to Data Requires Government Support and Cooperation
- The Commission recommends:
- B. Enhancing the Information Capacity of Individuals
- C. Promoting Public Engagement
- A. Maximizing the Availability of Relevant and Credible Information
- Appendices
- Endnotes
Recommendation 6
2 comments
Recommendation 6: Integrate digital and media literacy as critical elements of education at all levels through collaboration among federal, state, and local education officials.
Successful participation in the digital information ecology entails two kinds of literacy, or skill sets. One is typically called “digital literacy,” learning how to work the information and communication technologies of our networked age and understanding the social, cultural, and ethical issues surrounding those technologies. The second is “media literacy,” the ability to access, analyze, evaluate, and create the information products that media disseminate.
Although virtually every school in the United States is connected to the Internet, many local communities have not integrated either digital or media literacy into their K–12 curricula. The Internet is offered primarily as a research tool, and students’ encounters with the Internet are framed by issues of reliability and censorship. The situation is often little better at the college level and for adult education generally. There may be more chances to learn the tools, but only rare opportunities to explore their use and implications more deeply. In many communities, informal adult-education opportunities to develop digital and media literacies are often wildly oversubscribed, if they exist at all.
The future of American democracy demands that we educate our citizens better, starting at an early age:
With an ever-increasing range of media messages in so many forms, students need to understand the process by which authors convey meaning about socially constructed experience. The use of digital media and popular-culture texts not only stimulates young people’s engagement, motivation, and interest in learning but enables them to build a richer, more nuanced understanding of how texts of all kinds work within a culture.53
It may be tempting for teachers and administrators who are themselves uncomfortable with new media to view digital and media competencies as “addons” to basic learning in “reading, writing and, arithmetic.” These competencies are, however, new forms of foundational learning.
The consequences of neglecting this challenge can be dire. Students who are deeply immersed in the world of online communication outside of school may find classrooms that marginalize new technologies both tedious and irrelevant. For students who lack online access at home, schooling that fails to provide digital and media skills threatens to leave them at a profound social, economic, and cultural disadvantage.
The federal government should launch a national initiative to assess the quality of digital and media literacy programs in the nation’s schools. This should include efforts made in institutions of higher education to prepare future teachers for the new literacies. The survey should determine what schools are teaching their students and measure the needs for both equipment and teacher training. It is also critical to evaluate the learning opportunities available to Americans who have already graduated high school and to promote best practices for education at all levels to help Americans strengthen
their digital literacy. Only a combination of national leadership and state and local initiative can successfully produce the reforms needed.
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One Economy's National Digital Literacy Initiative
One Economy Corporation recently submitted its National Digital Literacy Initiative (NDLI) to the Federal Communications Commission for consideration in crafting the National Broadband Plan. One Economy is led by Rey Ramsey, one of the 15 members of the Knight Commission, and has had extensive experience providing digital literacy training to over 3,000 young people in low income communities. The NDLI plan focuses on four areas for implementing and expanding digital literacy: delivering digital literacy efforts in communities, in schools, through online and mobile curricula, and through a national awareness campaign. The NDLI provides a blueprint for achieving Knight Commission recommendations 6, 7, 8 and 12 as they relate to digital literacy. Read One Economy's comments and proposal here.
October is National Information Literacy Awareness Month
October has been designated National Information Literacy Awareness Month (read the White House proclamation here). It seems a good time to point out the excellent work being done by the National Forum for Information Literacy (http://www.infolit.org/) to advance the goals of information literacy and lifelong learning. The NFIL will celebrate its 20th anniversary at a two day meeting in Washington, DC on October 15-16. NFIL has one of the best definitions of what information literacy is: "Information Literacy is defined as the ability to know when there is a need for information, to be able to identify, locate, evaluate, and effectively use that information for the issue or problem at hand." It's clear that the acquisition of these skills needs to begin early, and it needs to happen in schools. How well are American schools teaching these and other digital and media literacy skills?