User:Tuj37622/Digital media in education
Digital media in education refers to the use of interactive multimedia in the classroom setting. Digital media involves incorporating multiple digital softwares, devices, and platforms as a tool for learning. The use of digital media in education is growing rapidly in today's age. They compete with books as the leading means of communication in the classroom which is more than every before. This form of education is slowly combating the traditional forms of education that have been around for a long time. With the introduction of virtual education, there has been a need for more incorporation of other digital platforms in online classrooms.
Initial Use and History of Digital Media in Education
How Digital Media Is Used In Education
Digital media takes several different forms, such as email, video, websites, photos, and slideshows. In a study done by Alison Cook-Sather, students tend to be more comfortable with communicating by e-mail. Emails allow direct communication with a student and instructor outside the classroom. Students can have dialogue at any time with their professors on problems or questions they are having. This allows students and instructors to advance communication techniques even outside of the classroom. Through visual presentations students and instructors, can put forth their information with video and photo for context or engagement. Showcasing their topic through video and photo has become a major tool in the classroom for more visual learners. For example, in an article by Jon M. Wargo and Kara Clayton, U.S. secondary students amplified by a global political climate of fear, oppression, and increased nationalism, used multimodal composition, and video production in particular, as a means to participate in politics and voice their opinion. Through video production students were able to create a message and display it to a larger audience. The study showed that presenting information in the form of a video production increased student interactions with the assignment. Students felt more in control of their work, and production process allowed for them to voice their own opinions. Through the internet and websites like Google Classroom, Canvas, Blackboard, Slack, Discord, students, and professors can obtain and share information and assignments in one place. this use of digital media in education allows students to access more useful information, communicate and, find opportunities all inside their classes. As time has passed different forms of digital media, such as laptops, video, and online research have been incorporated into daily education.
Benefits and Implications of Digital Media in Education
The main benefits of digital media in education is that it can increase student engagement. In addition, it helps students work through difficult concepts with multiple resources. Digital instruction helps show difficult topics that are often hard to understand. When students use digital technology in a course, all the students in the classroom have the opportunity to hone those digital skills. The main implications of digital media in education is that, it gives teachers and instructors the opportunity to engage in dialogue based on mutual respect and reciprocity. Secondly, there is a link between the virtual and the actual based on the fundamental human relationship at the foundation of all teaching and learning
Opportunities Available Through Digital Media
New programs and classes are being added to curriculum every year. For instance, the University of Connecticut launched a digital media and graphic design major in 2015. This includes various classes such as web design, digital culture, animation, and more.
Digital media allows people to showcase their work to social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Student’s work can also reach a larger crowd and receive comments and opinions via Reddit, YouTube, Vimeo. Pages like these allow public display of anyone’s ideas and work. . Students looking for work or internships to strengthen their resumé also will find opportunity online through sites such as Linkedin.
Digital Media Literacy
Even though there is no exact definition of media literacy, it can be closely defined as the ability to decode information from digital media, take meaning from it, and adequately communicate the idea to others. Media literacy is a practice that allows people to access, critically evaluate, and create media. Information presented in the form of digital media is absorbed and expressed differently than when in the form of traditional media. Evidently, literacy has always been a form of social power. Even though not everyone has the accessibility and opportunity to engage in such practices, today's world is saturated with digital media. It is important to implement these technological changes into the education system to prepare individuals to be engaged in political, social, and economic aspects of society. Due to this, it is crucial for education systems to examine distinct forms of teaching and provide the appropriate resources and knowledge for the contemporary world.
One of the reasons why digital media literacy is taught is because our society is becoming increasingly saturated with media content and messaging. Media contains messaging that can influence perceptions, beliefs and attitudes, and digital media literacy education teaches students how to discern messaging techniques.
In education, media literacy encourages students to ask questions about what they watch, hear, and read. These questions might address source bias, reliability, and authority. Engagement with media platforms such as blogs, websites and podcasts are key to creating a cooperative education environment. "Cooperative education takes seriously the social and reciprocal nature of teaching and learning. It empowers teachers to relinquish authoritarian control, and encourages them to weave their expertise into the community of learning that emerges dynamically in the courses they teach."
Media literacy also involves the ability of students to understand strategy to market media. Understanding trends, keywords, timing, and more assets that allow successful marketing. Media literacy is a major focus in the Digital Media in Business Education concentration study.
Coronavirus's Effects on Education
Covid-19 has changed the way digital media is used in the class room. With this virus people wonder if this form of learning is going to become the new normal. Eddie M. Mulenga and José M. Marbán study students in Zambia during the pandemic to find how they adapted in the subject of Mathematics. Zambia was no different from a lot of the countries response pulling in-person class and going fully virtual. there student were not ready or prepared to use and navigate the unfamiliar platforms and saw engagement in the content fall off.
How It Has Effected on Secondary Education
Disadvantages of the Use of Digital Media Platforms in Classrooms
Academic Surveillance
Surveillance plays a large role in all aspect of people's lives. With academics transitioning from a traditional class to a virtual environment there are many ways for surveillance to creep in, in these new academic environments. [1]
Academic Integrity
Overuse of Technology
References
- Humphreys, Lee. (2010). Who’s watching whom? A study of interactive technology and surveillance. Journal of Communication. 61(4). P. 575-595
- Jemielniak, Dariusz, and Aibar, Eduard. (2016). Bridging the gap between Wikipedia and Academia. Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology67(7): 1773–1776.
- Gebhart, M. (2020, March 21). Schools are pushing the boundaries of surveillance technologies. Retrieved February 28, 2021, from https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2020/02/schools-are-pushing-boundaries-surveillance-technologies
- Christine Greenhow, Julia Sonnevend, & Colin Agur. (2016). Education and Social Media : Toward a Digital Future. The MIT Press.
- Anna Visvizi, Miltiadis D. Lytras, & Linda Daniela. (2019). The Future of Innovation and Technology in Education : Policies and Practices for Teaching and Learning Excellence. Emerald Publishing Limited.
- ^ Humphreys, Lee (2011). "Who's Watching Whom? A Study of Interactive Technology and Surveillance". Journal of Communication. 61 (4): 575–595. doi:10.1111/j.1460-2466.2011.01570.x. ISSN 1460-2466.