Skip to main content
  • English
  • Français

Footer Social Media Icons

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • RSS
  • TikTok
Home
  • Home
  • Digital Media Literacy
    • General Information
    • Media Issues
    • Digital Issues
    • Educational Games
    • Media Literacy Week
    • Workshops
  • Research and Evaluation
    • Our Approach
    • What We Do
    • Research Reports
    • Young Canadians in a Wireless World
  • For Parents
  • Teacher Resources
    • Find Lessons & Resources
    • Digital Media Literacy Outcomes by Province & Territory
    • Digital Media Literacy Framework
    • Media Literacy 101
    • Digital Literacy 101
  • Blog
  • Get Involved
    • Become a donor
    • Become a volunteer
    • Become a Corporate Partner
    • Media Literacy Week
    • Teen Fact-Checking Network

Breadcrumb

  1. Home

Media and morality

The new movie Zero Dark Thirty, which tells the story of the tracking and eventual killing of Osama Bin Laden, has received several Oscar nominations (including Best Picture), but it's attracting another kind of attention as well: several writers, including Jane Meyer at The New Yorker and Peter Maass at The Atlantic, have accused it of condoning or even glorifying the use of torture by US intelligence agencies.

Human Rights, Movies, Television, Violence

New media education resources

Two new media education resources crossed our desk recently: Totally Wired by Anastasia Goodstein and Children's Learning in a Digital World, edited by Teena Willoughby and Eileen Wood. While they are extremely different, both are useful additions to any media education library.

Internet & Mobile, Professional Development, Resources

Review: New Media Education Resources

This collection of articles on media education around the world will fulfill an important need: informing us of the struggle to critically understand the global implications of media education.

Professional Development, Resources

Lisa for President: Women, politics and the media

The last year has been an unusually busy one for watchers of gender representation in the news media, with not one but two high-profile women involved in the U.S. presidential race. The way in which these two politicians were covered provides a view of how gender in politics is portrayed in the media, and how this can help to explain just how unusual those two women are.

Human Rights, Journalism & News, Resources, Stereotyping

Literacy, Digital Literacy or Media Literacy?

Emerging ideas and trends in the space of new literacies are indeed fluid and, through discussion, seem to always be in a state of constant flux. As teachers and learners engage with online content and media, strategies and pedagogies bounce between conventional and contemporary approaches. This ongoing conversation and discovery is representative of the media landscape itself - always shifting - suggesting that our strategies and approaches should be charged with being able to adapt and grow. A tall order indeed, so how do we build capacity that makes room for convention, innovation and redefinition in literacy?

Events, Professional Development

History's Mirror: Media education and the teaching of history

On November 5, 2009, MNet Media Education Specialist Matthew Johnson participated in the Association of Canadian Studies' conference Knowing Ourselves: The Challenge of Teaching History of Canadian Official Minority Language Communities, speaking on the topic Media, Diversity and Our History. What follows is an expanded version of his remarks.

Events, Online Hate, Professional Development, Resources, Stereotyping

A Revolution of Text: Building a Bridge With New Media

I was recently asked by Jane Tallim to write a guest blog and seriously wondered what suggestions I could offer that would appeal to high school English and Media Studies teachers. We all know that teaching media is like trying to hit a moving target, and education lags behind revolutionary changes in new media forms. However, over the past decade of teaching both Media Studies and high school English, I have spent much time considering the intersection of new media forms with traditional English forms and have tried to build a bridge of understanding across time for my students regardless of the target. By focusing on the skills of deconstruction and construction, I believe the form of the text, or the new medium, becomes less relevant to comprehension.

Internet & Mobile, Media Production, Professional Development, Resources

Shaking the Movers: Youth Rights and Media - Lesson

Students will discuss the concept of human rights and then learn how these ideas led to the drafting of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.

Digital Citizenship, Human Rights, Privacy

People with a disability: left behind by the Media Age?

It’s ironic that as computers and other communications technology have become more accessible to the general public over the last thirty years, they have actually become less accessible to a segment of the population, one to whom access is everything: people with disabilities. More ironic still is that the history of communications technology is intimately tied to the drive to integrate people with disabilities more fully into society.

Human Rights, Internet & Mobile, Resources, Stereotyping

Lights, Camera, Action! Making Media in the Classroom, Made Easy

Matthew Johnson

For nearly thirty years, Canadian teachers have been at the forefront of getting students online and preparing them to use networked technologies safely, productively and responsibly. Many young Canadians have their first experiences with the internet in their classrooms and school libraries. Over the past decade, though, while digital tools have come to provide new opportunities for creating and distributing digital content, MediaSmarts’ research shows that most Canadian teachers aren’t making media in the classroom.

Comics, Digital Citizenship, Internet & Mobile, Media Literacy 101, Media Production, Movies, Professional Development, Resources, Video Games

Pagination

  • Current page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Next page ››
  • Last page Last »

Resource Type

  • Blog entry
  • Lesson Plan
  • Tutorials & Workshops

Filter by Categories

  • 2SLGBTQ+ Representation
  • Alcohol Marketing
  • Artificial intelligence
  • Authenticating Information
  • Blogging
  • Body Image
  • Cell Phones and Texting
  • Comics
  • Crime Portrayal
  • Cyberbullying
  • Cyber Security
  • Digital Citizenship
  • Digital Health
  • Diversity in Media
  • Environment
  • Events
  • Excessive Internet Use
  • File Sharing
  • Food Marketing
  • Gender Representation
  • Global Development Portrayal
  • (-) Human Rights
  • Indigenous People
  • Instant Messaging
  • Intellectual Property
  • Internet & Mobile
  • Journalism & News
  • Marketing & Consumerism
  • Media Literacy 101
  • Media Production
  • Movies
  • Music
  • Online Ethics
  • Online Gambling
  • Online Hate
  • Online Marketing
  • Parents
  • Persons with Disabilities
  • Pornography
  • Privacy
  • Privilege in the Media
  • (-) Professional Development
  • Religion
  • Resources
  • Sexting
  • Sexual Exploitation
  • Social Networking
  • Sports
  • Stereotyping
  • Television
  • Tobacco Marketing
  • Video Games
  • Video Sharing
  • Violence
  • Visible Minorities
  • Young Canadians In A Wired World

Sign up & Follow Us

Stay informed with daily news and updates!

Learn More

Stay connected with us on social media!

How to Support Us

Interested in supporting MediaSmarts? Find out how you can get involved. Charitable Registration No. 89018 1092 RR0001

Learn More

Find Teacher Resources

Corporate Partners

  • APTN
  • Amazon
  • Bell
  • Google
  • Meta
  • NFB
  • TELUS Wise
  • TikTok
  • YouTube

MediaSmarts

MediaSmarts is a non-partisan registered charity that receives funding from government and corporate partners to support the development of original research and educational content. Our funders and corporate partners do not influence our work, and any resources that offer guidance on specific digital tools and platforms do not constitute an endorsement.

Footer - This Site

  • Careers
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Footer - About Us

  • Press Centre
  • Copyright Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • English
  • Français