Media
and Information Literacy (with focus on Digital Literacy)
The MIL Competency Framework for Myanmar[1] defines digital literacy as the ability to communicate or find information from the Internet or online. Digital literacy does not only cover technical competencies. Equally important, it encompasses appropriate attitudes and values which ensure that digital literacy is practiced for the common good. In effect, learners are able to reach a ‘critical consciousness[2]’, i.e. to identify and then to take action against the oppressive elements of their digital realities. Figure 1 below, from Media and Information Literate Citizens: Think Critically, Click Wisely! (UNESCO, 2021, p. 9), shows the key outcomes for learners on Media and Information Literacy courses.
Recognizing the need for digital literacy among teachers in Myanmar, UNESCO has provided a standalone MOOC on MIL and Digital Literacy package including five modules of work. The primary intended users for the proposed MOOC on Digital Literacy are educators in different classroom settings across the country. As the focus is on developing competencies in each of the priority elements of the MIL Ecosystem for Myanmar – knowledge, skills, attitudes and their effective application - the MOOC has been designed according to experiential learning principles. Where new concepts are learnt, they are then applied in the context of a teaching and learning situation, and then reflected on.
[1] UNESCO Yangon Project Office. (2020). Towards a Media and Information Literacy Competency Framework. Retrieved from: https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000374230
[2] Freire, P. (1970). Pedagogy of the Oppressed. New York: Continuum.
The five MOOC modules on Media and Information Literacy and Digital Literacy aim to ensure the intended users become media and information literate and become responsible digital citizens whom are able to think critically of online content and the information they receive. Following two workshops conducted by UNESCO Myanmar informing the development of the MIL Framework for Myanmar, five components of the MIL ecosystem were prioritized[1], including social media literacy, media literacy, news literacy, digital literacy, and information literacy.
Figure 2: Five components of the MIL Ecosystem in Myanmar.
[1] Digital
Literacy in Media and Information Literacy by Ramon R. Tuazon, UNESCO Myanmar
Office
The learning objectives for the five modules for educators from different settings across Myanmar are therefore summarized in the table below:
Module I: Digital Literacy
Module II: Social Media Literacy
Module III: Information Disorder
Module IV: Critical Consumption of Information
Module V: Privacy and Security
In terms of development of key values and attitudes, the learning objectives focus specifically on freedom of expression, freedom of information, freedom of participation, understanding of international human rights standards, tolerance and respect of others, awareness of self and value of challenging one’s own beliefs.
သင်တန်းပြီးဆုံးကြောင်းလက်မှတ်ရရှိရန်၊ သင်ခန်းစာများ၊ ပဟေဋ္ဌိများနှင့် အကဲဖြတ်မှုအားလုံးကို ပြီးဆုံးအောင်လုပ်ဆောင်ရန် လိုအပ်သည်။
Very good.
By U W******* at 2022-05-27 23:42:06
good
By kya******* at 2022-11-10 14:29:16
benifit for me.
By Daw************ at 2022-12-14 06:30:56
all the modules are completed with many sectors.
By Dr ************ at 2023-02-05 18:37:05
သင်တန်းပြီးဆုံးကြောင်းလက်မှတ်မပေးမီ သင်တန်းအားအကဲဖြတ်ပေးရန် လိုအပ်ပါသည်။
Adrian Underhill takes a practical approach to teaching pronunciation in this vid...
ပိုမိုလေ့လာမည်