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What is Media Ecology

Handbook of Research on Media Literacy in Higher Education Environments
An approach to media analysis that foregrounds the means and technologies of communication media rather than the messages themselves. A key tenet is that communication media create unique cultural environments, providing broad paradigms of understanding biased toward the parameters of a dominant medium.
Published in Chapter:
Preparing to Be Digital: The Paradigm Shift for Media Studies and Higher Education
Katherine G. Fry (Brooklyn College (CUNY), USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-4059-5.ch005
Abstract
Today most media messages are shaped by and circulate within the multi-faceted, always available, participatory communication space called the digital environment. This participatory, de-centralized space indicates a paradigm shift in media and communication, and therefore in the culture at large. In the new paradigm, comprehensive media ecology-infused media literacy is necessary not only in the disciplines of communication and media studies, but across higher education. One media department at a U.S. urban university is beginning to implement a comprehensive five-part model of activist media literacy education as it transitions from traditional media industry training to deeper media literacy-informed education. The five-part model engages core concepts from media ecology, critical cultural studies, and critical pedagogy, with a final goal of educating enlightened media practitioners interested in seeking social change. In the emerging media environment, messages, forms, and new ways of thinking and being ought to be the mandate of twenty-first century higher education.
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More Results
Nomophobia
Is the study of media environments. It is based around the idea that technology and techniques and modes of information play a leading role in human affairs.
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Culture of Use of Moodle in Higher Education: Networked Relations between Technology, Culture and Learners
The inspiration for media ecology comes from Marshall McLuhan although it was introduced by Neil Postman in 1968. It is being used an optic to understand media environment that we live in today. According to Neil Postman, media ecology refers to the media environment human beings encounter. He explains that media ecology deals with the interaction between the technology and human beings as the interaction defines the culture and the existence of human kind in a media-saturated environment. Further, media ecology examines how media is affected by culture, language, technology in line with Latour’s actor network theory. In the course of our interaction with media, it structures how and what we see, perceive and conduct ourselves. For instance, a research that explores how text messaging or Skype affects intimacy and love draws on media ecology.
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Shared Values in Social Media and Comics Scan Communities as New Belonging-Marks
The media environmental sphere is transformed by our uses of what exists there. When we propose analysis the media environment, we’re looking for a space where the media are in constant transformation, evolution, adaptation… The use of mediated contemporary spaces, tools and it’s subjects appear as a ecosystem.
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Media Ecology and the 21st Century Classroom
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