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chat, tell me a little bit about yourself. You're here for a reason. I want to know all about it. So let's see who's here in the room. Because this is that. This is a crew of people with deep interest in media literacy. We have much to learn from each other. Okay, so, but let's do let's do this first, I want to take you to the website and kind of do a quick overview of what is new about the book that I really love, what makes the book really like, something I'm super proud of, and how I hope the book will affect you know, the generations of teachers to come who are exploring media literacy, one of the things that you have to do to create a second edition is you have To justify why a second edition is needed. And so I knew I needed to, I needed to think more about how the protection empowerment dialectic plays out. You know, that's that important tension in the field, this healthy tension in the field, between media literacy as a way to protect ourselves from the potential risks and harms of living in a media saturated society and the empowerment perspective which explores and examines all the benefits that media literacy and media can offer. I knew I wanted to really deepen the inquiry oriented approach. The pedagogy of media literacy is that we go, we teachers go on a learning inquiry journey with our students. So organizing this book around questions and really having questions be at the heart of of the of the of the curriculum, actually, truthfully, I think you could teach the whole course just using the questions. Don't tell anybody I said that, but the questions are so good, right? That if you have the courage to use these questions in your class, you will find that everyone will have a dynamic learning experience. So those, those questions that activate intellectual curiosity and make people want to create things. And then, of course, the design, oh, this book has got a really great design. And there's all kinds of political cartoons and images and illustrations. And you know, if you're a if you're a person who like me, like I like to make sense of images, right? And the figures and the photos and the illustrations are all awesome. Of course, one of the things that I was especially happy to do is to be able to incorporate the grandparents of media literacy, right but now they're called trailblazers, because some people told me in the first edition that grandparents was a kind of a wonky way to think about People like Roland, Barth, Stuart Hall, Marshall, McLuhan, Len Masterman, all the minds, all the people whose ideas have kind of fertilized the practice of media literacy. So now they're Trailblazers media literacy discourse. I'm going to show you that in in a bit. In the first edition, I used the smartphone, right? You know, the smartphone, the media literacy smartphone. In this edition, I've created a new visual representation I'm calling the discourse wheel, and I want to share with you why that's really great. And then the idea that every chapter invites students to go on the journey that includes access, analyze, create, reflect, act. You know, this is the model that I developed so many years ago now, in 2010 when I wrote media literacy a plan of action for the Aspen Institute and the Knight Foundation, that that model has been super robust, and I feel like 

it's it's really evident how much vitality it really has still okay, so I'm sharing with you how to do the free download, right? You just click on the picture that says free download. Oh so nice, right? And here comes, I think, hopefully, hopefully, here comes, here comes the the here comes the teacher's guide. You know, in my syllabus, we have learning outcomes, and so I shared with you the learning outcomes that are in my media literacy class for undergrads, right? It's so hard to write these learning outcomes because, you know, you could put in the whole kitchen sink what's the most important stuff, right? And so there they are, right, gaining awareness of media's role in in identity and social behavior, and appreciation for the role of media in shaping norms and values, strengthening critical analysis skills and applying concepts, theories and knowledge to gain insight on digital media and technology, and then advancing students advancing their own communication skills right Using a variety of different forms and genres and tools, and then increasing that meta, cognitive and reflective thinking, right, especially in thinking about the impact and consequences of media on society, and then really thinking about media literacy in relation to power, right? How does media maintain or reproduce or challenge the existing inequalities and injustices in this global and interconnected world. So the Table of Contents focuses on, 



So we got a whole new thing to try to figure out how it works now in AI, exactly, and the one I'm going to choose is this one who decides what makes media good. So now what we're going to do is we're going to go back to the main page. And you said you wanted to do how do search engines works. That's chapter three. So you and I are going to spend some time scrolling down through this page to see what's what would students see if they encountered this page, they'd see the media literacy learning model that's access, analyze, create, reflect and act. They get a summary of some key ideas. They get an analysis activity where this one's analyze a meme, a Facebook meme, meta threatening to leave Europe right, and some of the discourse wheels some some critical questions to ask in relation to that, a create to learn activity, which is a curation activity. Use AI to curate a list of resources and reflect on your online shopping right where AI is in overdrive, guiding you toward purchases, purchases of all kinds, and then take action by communicating with a member of 
Congress about, especially about the regulation of AI, right? And so write a write an email, tell your member of Congress your position, of course, studying the work of Michel Foucault, a perfect thought leader, Trailblazer on this topic of power in relation to algorithms and AI and all the rest. And then some videos that you might want to watch, right? So I'm going to break you into small groups, and you and your partner are going to pick. Each partner picks a chapter that you would like to explore. One of you might want to share your screen and or have a conversation about why you picked that chapter. I'm only going to give you about seven or eight minutes to do this work, but you're going to make a new friend, and then when we come back, we're going to talk about some more features of the book, and we're going to talk meet with the people who helped me to create it. Give me a thumbs up if you understand what's happening now, in this kind of way, cool way to do things, right? It's a breakout room. Oh my gosh. So I'm going to create how many breakout rooms? I'm going to create 10 breakout rooms. This is, wait, wait, hold on. I'm going to create 12 breakout rooms. This is great. Now, listen, if you get sent into a room and there's nobody there. Do me a favor. Don't sit there all by yourself. Come back into the main room and then I will reassign you. This game works best when you have a conversation about the topics that you picked. Okay, cool. The rooms are open. Have a Great conversation 
right, they did. And they're living in an era where the first the fierce competition is having kind of a complicated they don't want to go behind a paywall. They want their news to be free. Hey, Michael Grabowski, it's Renee Hobbs and Gracie. We're we're talking about, we're in these small group breakout rooms. We're talking about chapter four. How do people get the news? Great. Gracie said, as a former journalist like this is like, this is her jam, right? How do we teach about the news when in an era of fierce competition in the news industry, my students don't want to pay for news, and eventually they have to understand that you have to pay for news because otherwise you're going to get, you know, junk, so great, and
it. One of the things that I appreciate is that my students grew up never really understanding the two types of journalism that exist, right the journalists that are doing what we understand to be journalism, and then the news aggregation and the news adjacent concept content, I discovered that was my term of art, right? News adjacent content, right? It looks like news, you know, it has a headline and a photo, but it's something else entirely. And so and but yet, at the same time, I also wanted them to understand that the vital role that news and even Eyewitness News plays in the role and so in this analysis activity, we analyze a little piece of video from Al Jazeera, 
I think when I hear that these videos are delaying is that Louisiana State Police is working to get their story together. I
you got the concept, right. This is from AJ plus Al Jazeera plus, which is a news organization located in Doha, Qatar, right? And students get to encounter the news video, basically, Oops, hold on. I gotta get this guy into a session. Just a second here. Hold on. I gotta. And then they ask these three questions, what inferences can be made about the author, the purpose and the target audience. In what ways does the context shape how this message is I'm gonna assign Oh, Oh, where did he go? Darn. Okay. Wait, hold on. I gotta get I gotta assign him to join us here in room four. How does the context shape how the message is interpreted, and how does the economic and political system influence the construction of the message, format and content. In the book, we learn that AJ Al Jazeera is funded 90% by the Qatari government. They advertising is not how they make their money. So the investment in quality journalism is because, basically, they're they don't have to have they don't have to be market sensitive to grab eyeballs, right? The same way an advertiser driven system is so but this is the activity that I use every year no matter what, and I absolutely love it. Students work with a partner. They find it a story that interests them both, that in itself, sometimes takes some negotiation, right? Boys who are only interested in sports, the girls who are only interested in fashion. When they sit together, ah, take some time. What's the story? What do I do? 

so they sit together, they pick a story, and then they work through these series of questions, right? And for some of my students, it's the first time they've had a collaborative authorship experience, right? They have to write the answers out as a team, right? And so then they have to discuss, well, you know, do you want to do one and I'll do another? Do we? Should we talk about them both? So they have a experience of collaboration, right? And then it's also a really great pre writing activity, because once you've done this, man, the essay just flies right out. You know, you can really write an essay. Well, if you've done that as a pre writing activity in class, even if you only did three of the items and not all of them right, even if you only chose to focus on context right or credibility, but can still be super as a pre writing activity. And then here's my favorite part, I created a way for students across schools to interact with each other. So if you want to ask these questions, the different kinds of news, what catches your attention, which genres you 
think are most important, you can join the conversation and go here to this Padlet Wall. Click on this blue see this plus sign right here, you can make a comment on answering this question, put your answer here. And if you're into funny gifts and who isn't right, you can put your funny gift in and market as well. So it's a way for students to kind of be in a it be in a conversation with people from outside of their class. So I just love that about the flexibility that digital technologies. Let us do you know, 
the youth to historical events that have tied perfectly into what's happening today in terms of immigration and also, you know, discrimination, I should say so. I am sure you know, without any prodding, that my favorite thing is page 360 to 361 because I do think that we'd be history literate on the US experience of media literacy as American educators, but we're looking forward to adding to this with our international partners too. So, oh,
so beautiful. So Mark, thank you so much for calling out my favorite two page spread in the book is in chapter 14, and you designed it. And a big shout out to you, 100 years of US media literacy, we, we, we put a lot of information into two pages. We had a lot of fun building it together, and it ignites curiosity. And as you look at it, you'll you'll notice, as this is a room full of people who are media literacy teachers. You'll notice what Renee and mark left out as much as what we included right and what we left in, it reflects our biases and our point of view. But here's another cool here's another cool activity that's that I want to introduce you to because let me see if I can share my screen again here, but this time I'm going to share here. So each chapter has a reflect assignment activity in in the chapter 14, it's reflect on the great debates, right? Should media literacy protect students? Right? Should video media production be so important for media literacy? Should media literacy focus on popular culture, or should it address like academic 

knowledge? Right? Should media literacy have a more explicit political and ideological agenda, right? Should it be a specialist subject or integrated into existing curriculum? When you click on the link, you go to a Padlet Wall right in the first edition, we called you to flip grid, but Flipgrid when it went away, Flipgrid went away, so we recreated it here, and that means you can comment on a great debate on Padlet, and you're seeing me do it right now here. You can make your comment here, and you can, you can add a you can add a playful gift, right? And you can publish it, and other people can comment on it. So it's a place actually, that could connect students in Georgia with students in California, with students in North Dakota, with students in in Alabama, with students in Maryland. And I'm really excited about that, and I hope you get a chance to try that out with your students. And of course, in chapter 14, we invite you to become an advocate for media literacy education, and recognize the roots back to the grandparents right. Get to understand some of those Trailblazers whose work was
so important in the media literacy movement? Okay, so we'll hear from you more person, somebody else, somebody who didn't look at chapter 14, didn't look at the chapter on news, didn't look at the chapter on who you can trust, somebody who did something else. Tell me what you talked about in your small group. Which chapters did you look at? We'll hear from one more.
put the vocabulary words in each chapter, because vocabulary does matter when it comes to gaining knowledge. Added a sort of bulleted list of key ideas and a set of vocabulary words that help students deepen their thinking skills, really, because when you have words for concepts, you actually go further faster. And of course, I shared with you the reflect activity. I'm really excited about that, but take a look at this. Create activities. Let's just say you could only use one of these in your classroom, or maybe someone you are already doing some of these create activities. Which one might you want to look at as you think about creative expression activities for your students, I'll just invite you to call out a choice and explain why you chose it. 14 creative expression activities. Which one might you want to look at first I
and they and they said, you know, this idea of like getting, deepening our awareness by getting like like, by acting like, recognizing that the stuff we do every day is kind of strange, so that is one of my favorite assignments as well. So of course, I'm super proud of the Act activities, and people have always asked me, why did you put Act into your media literacy definition? And I think it's obvious, but if you could only pick one of these, do with your students, which one would it be, and why? What a list? Oh, yeah, you referenced changed one thing about your media diet, right? You you that you mentioned that Erin as an activity that you tried, I 

you know how much, how joyful it can be. Now listen here. I want to talk a little bit about the collaborative effort involved in making this book, because I got to introduce you to some key elements I haven't shown you, the the Instructor Resources, but I definitely want to show you the, hold on here. Let's, let's freshen this up. I want to show you the thank you page. It's hard to believe, but Natalie, since we started this project, a whole lot of college faculty from all over have contributed to make this book better. So we decided to put together the whole list of the reviewers who, over the course of the first edition and the second edition gave us really valuable feedback. So thank you to the reviewers for the valuable valuable feedback. And Natalie and you, I'm, I'm going to throw it to you a little bit, because I can't even wrap my head around all the ways in which you made this book a reality, right? And so Natalie, will you introduce yourself to the crowd and talk a little bit about your role in making this book come to life? Oh, 


she's going to show you something that you're all going to, I think, really appreciate and and use. So let me share my screen with you right now. Sarah did something super helpful. This is a page I haven't shown you yet. You see it's called Instructor Resources. I showed you, I took you here so that we downloaded this little PDF document, right? But the Instructor Resources are password protected, and each chapter has a little bit of study guide, quiz, questions, discussion, chapters and slides, right? If you want to receive this material, you can do it. But actually I'm going to show you how you can do it now, because the 31 of you who are all here need to be able to access the Instructor Resources. So say that you go to our social media. Free up, pops the guest password, and you type that in, capital M, capital L, capital A action. Yont, will you put that in the chat? Capital M, capital L, capital A action, my undergraduate student, Sarah Lustig revised the Google Slides. Sarah, can I call you up to the stage? Can you while I'm sharing the screen? Can you? Can you talk to me about how you did it? How? Yeah, 14 slide decks. 



Sarah. I do just want to give a little background. I am a sophomore at the University of Rhode Island, and last semester, I actually took Professor Hobbs digital and media literacy class with the first edition. So I have that perspective as a student. Read that book, learned from that book, learn from Hobbs. And this is a little random, but I also work as a teaching assistant for computer science. My major is actually computer science, so I work with kids in intro levels. I work with seniors, even if I'm only a sophomore. So I really have perspectives from teaching and from learning. So I kind of decide, decided to design this slide deck based on how I learned best, how I see other kids learn best. I tried to go for a cohesive design and for the more important slides and concepts. I stuck to a specific theme so that they pop out. Kids know how to recognize them. They know it's important. And, yeah, I really learned a lot taking that course. And I'm not just saying that because Renee is my boss. It actually was honestly my favorite course of the semester. And I'm, 
I mean, the computer science, it's so dull, sometimes so critical thinking only and like just, I mean, you're sitting behind a desk coding, so to get this breath of fresh air and actually think and just approach things in a different light and really see them and think about them. I mean, it was a great semester, great class, and I really did learn a lot, and from someone who I feel like I already am well versed in media and digital universe. I feel like this class actually was, you know, I learned something every portion of the way. So I'm really happy. And thank you again for letting me have a part in it. And thank you to Mark Davis. He helped me too with slides and had comments. Really learned a lot. So thank you. And