783 resultados para Mass media education
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Trabajo no publicado
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Se hacen unas reflexiones sobre la importancia de los medios de comunicación social como vehiculo del lenguaje del mundo contemporáneo, cómo estos medios hacen al niño y al joven sujetos de la cultura audiovisual y la urgencia de una educación adecuada de los escolares en este campo, ya que una de las funciones de la escuela es integrar a los escolares en la cultura de su tiempo y ambiente para, al mismo tiempo, participar en esta realidad. Se expone un proyecto de experiencia para alumnos de octavo de EGB del Colegio San Juan Bosco, de Granada. El número de alumnos es aproximadamente ciento cuarenta. La metodología seleccionada ha sido la técnica del seminario y los títulos programados: técnica cinematográfica; las principales tendencias del cine actual; televisión; música moderna; radio; la prensa española y sus principales tendencias ideológicas. Cada seminario tiene sus objetivos y contenidos. Las clases de los seminarios están impartidas por los maestros del centro o por padres de alumnos. El tiempo dedicado a cada seminario será de una hora semanal durante un trimestre.
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An important feature of Axelrod`s model for culture dissemination or social influence is the emergence of many multicultural absorbing states, despite the fact that the local rules that specify the agents interactions are explicitly designed to decrease the cultural differences between agents. Here we re-examine the problem of introducing an external, global interaction-the mass media-in the rules of Axelrod`s model: in addition to their nearest neighbors, each agent has a certain probability p to interact with a virtual neighbor whose cultural features are fixed from the outset. Most surprisingly, this apparently homogenizing effect actually increases the cultural diversity of the population. We show that, contrary to previous claims in the literature, even a vanishingly small value of p is sufficient to destabilize the homogeneous regime for very large lattice sizes.
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As media education concepts and practices have been disseminated and strengthened in European countries and Americas, the policies responsible for that expansion remain little known, particularly in countries where the achievements have been recently noted. That is the case for Brazil, where there have been new opportunities for media education, considered as a valuable resource to help accomplish goals of the educational system. This paper looks into the contribution of media education to the enhancement of teaching and learning in the context of innovations brought by recent policies of the Brazilian Ministry of Education. After educational reform programmes which brought the opportunity for emerging fields such as media education, we produced teaching material and conducted a series of workshops with students and teachers from state secondary schools. By reading and producing multimedia information about local public services available to young people, pupils learned about democracy, citizenship, civic engagement, media language, and identity. Lessons from our experiment are discussed against the backdrop of education policies being implemented to ameliorate harsh conditions resulting from the recent economic crisis. We suggest that media education can help by creating a learning environment in which the students become aware of the value of educational attainments.
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Pós-graduação em Letras - IBILCE
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The project investigated the presentation of crime in the Lithuanian media and its possible impact on the general public's understanding of crime-related problems in society. Dobryninas concentrated on three main aspects of this problem: the development of the image of crime in the Lithuanian press and television, journalists' principles in presenting crime-related information, and the public attitude to the presentation of crime in the media. A content analysis of national newspapers from the period of 1992-1997 showed not only increasing interest in crime problems, but also the distorted nature of the image of crime in the media. In-depth interviews with Lithuanian journalists demonstrated that they understood their role in presenting crime-related information firstly as providing information oriented to high public demand, although at the same time they did not deny the commercial and entertainment aspects of crime reporting. Readership and audience research illustrated the clear influence of the media on the public understanding of crime problems in society. However, the virtual image of crime did not greatly affect the system of values and beliefs of Lithuanians, nor did it challenge their insistence that problems of crime could and should be managed within the framework of a civil and open society.