Reading the World for Power and Privilege: A Case Study within a Social Issues Teacher Education Course

Type of Presentation

Individual presentation

Brief Description of Presentation

This session will explore the value of applying critical media literacy within a required social issues teacher education course addressing class, race, culture, gender, religion, and LGBTQ issues and offer concrete activities to apply within teacher education.

Abstract of Proposal

In a qualitative pedagogical case study of pre-service teachers at a mid-size southwestern Christian University, a critical media literacy framework was applied to a required undergraduate teacher education course that included diversity issues such as class, gender, LGBTQ, culture, religion and race within the educational and schooling contexts. The researchers have noted that issues of power and privilege can be rather abstract and student resistance is common. The analysis techniques and concepts of critical media literacy (Kellner, 2007), however, offered the participants meaningful examples (White, 2003) of the course topics and aided them in critically reflecting upon their own personal understandings. Further, several participants, initially unaware of course topics, began to engage in independent interrogation of the media with which they are continually confronted within their daily lives in and out of the classroom. Such reflection augments the professional dispositions of teachers and offers the promise that teacher candidates will, in turn, teach media analysis tools and disrupt neo-liberal mainstream narratives within their own classrooms.

Location

Coastal Georgia Center

Start Date

3-26-2016 8:10 AM

End Date

3-26-2016 9:40 AM

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Mar 26th, 8:10 AM Mar 26th, 9:40 AM

Reading the World for Power and Privilege: A Case Study within a Social Issues Teacher Education Course

Coastal Georgia Center

In a qualitative pedagogical case study of pre-service teachers at a mid-size southwestern Christian University, a critical media literacy framework was applied to a required undergraduate teacher education course that included diversity issues such as class, gender, LGBTQ, culture, religion and race within the educational and schooling contexts. The researchers have noted that issues of power and privilege can be rather abstract and student resistance is common. The analysis techniques and concepts of critical media literacy (Kellner, 2007), however, offered the participants meaningful examples (White, 2003) of the course topics and aided them in critically reflecting upon their own personal understandings. Further, several participants, initially unaware of course topics, began to engage in independent interrogation of the media with which they are continually confronted within their daily lives in and out of the classroom. Such reflection augments the professional dispositions of teachers and offers the promise that teacher candidates will, in turn, teach media analysis tools and disrupt neo-liberal mainstream narratives within their own classrooms.