Media and Information Literacy for the Public Good
Global Media and
Information Literacy Week, commemorated annually, is a major
occasion for stakeholders to review and celebrate the progress achieved towards
“Media and
Information Literacy for All.”
Global Media and
Information Literacy Week 2021 is hosted by South Africa. This
year marks 10 years since the seeds of Global Media and Information Literacy
Week were planted in 2011 in Fez, Morocco. This was long before the exponential
rise in disinformation, political polarisation, increasing influence of digital platforms and the COVID-19 pandemic.
In 2021 the UN General Assembly decided to commemorate the week,
citing the need for the dissemination of factual, timely, targeted, clear,
accessible, multilingual and science-based information. The resolution
recognizes that the substantial digital divide and data inequalities that
exist among different countries and within them, can be addressed in part
by improving people’s competencies to seek, receive and impart
information in the digital realm.
In the current ecosystem of complex and sometimes contradictory messages
and meanings, it is hard to conceive of the public good being advanced, if the
public is disempowered in the face of opportunities and threats. Each
individual needs to be equipped with media and information literacy
competencies to understand the stakes, and to contribute to and benefit from
information and communication opportunities.
✿◆❀✿❀
‼️
What is Media
and Information Literacy?
Our brains depend on information to work optimally.
The quality of information we engage with largely determines our
perceptions, beliefs and attitudes. It could be information from other persons,
the media, libraries, archives, museums, publishers, or other information providers including those
on the Internet.
People across the world are witnessing a dramatic increase in
access to information and communication.
While some people are
starved for information, others are flooded with print, broadcast and digital content. Media and
Information Literacy (MIL) provides answers to the questions that we all ask
ourselves at some point. How can we access, search, critically assess, use and
contribute content wisely, both online and offline? What are our rights online
and offline? What are the ethical issues surrounding the access and use of
information? How can we engage with media and ICTs to promote equality,
intercultural and interreligious dialogue, peace, freedom of expression and
access to information?
Through capacity-building resources, such as curricula
development, policy guidelines and
articulation, and assessment framework, UNESCO supports the development of MIL
competencies among people.
^▲^
#LITERACY
#INTERNET #UN #INTERNATIONAL_DAY
#HWPL
#PEACE #IPYG #IWPG #WARP_OFFICE
I hope we can find the right direction through information.
ReplyDeleteWe are certainly living in an era of misinformation. The importance of objective reporting is more essential than ever before.
ReplyDelete