Frank Baker is a TV Journalist turned district administrator turned researcher, writer, and professional development facilitator. Across the diverse positions he’s held, Frank’s work is inspired by his commitment to educating teachers and students to be informed and discerning media consumers.
He has partnered with renowned organizations like NCTE, ASCD, and ISTE, published multiple works, and been nationally recognized and awarded for his work in the field. In addition, Frank has also contributed to the analysis and creation of media literacy standards for education. His entire bio could be an article, so I’ll stop here for the time being.
In the excerpts from our conversation that follow, this topic feels more critical than ever. With the proliferation of social media platforms, near constant internet access, polarization in media outlets, and vilification of the media, it’s a stressful and daunting subject.
However, it’s the dedication of people like Frank to educating others about this topic, empowering consumers, and helping society maintain trust in this important institution that can help instill and sow hope.
I walked away from this conversation with a better understanding of media literacy, an urgency for integrating it in education, and tangible strategies to practice media literacy in my own life. I hope you will too.
Bonus: Read Frank's article on the state of media literacy education in schools.
What is ‘literacy’ in the 21st century? “Reading, Writing, Listening, Speaking, and VIEWING,” answers Frank.
As our conversation evolves, he also shares how literacy, and specifically media literacy, is an ecosystem that encompasses how we access resources, analyze content, synthesize information, communicate findings and perspectives, and, even, create artifacts.
A quote Frank shared by Ernest L. Boyer, former president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and United States commissioner of education, reads:
It is no longer enough simply to read and write. Students must also become literate in the understanding of visual images. Our children must learn how to spot a stereotype, isolate a social cliché́, and distinguish facts from propaganda, analysis from banter, and important news from coverage.
At the helm of this redefinition of literacy is technology, which is entirely upending how we interact with the media. The impact of technology advances on media creation and consumption, however, is certainly not new; inventions like the printing press, radio, television, the internet, and now connected devices have similarly made media more accessible to consumers and have gradually made it easier for people to create media as well.
Throughout this time, media literacy has grown and evolved, so it makes sense that this continue to be a focus. However, it is also essential to understand that recent advancements and event – the polarization of news sources, the advent of fake news, and the broad mechanisms to disseminate these slanted and false media – have made media literacy even more relevant and necessary.
And as media literacy evolves, the topic becomes increasingly nuanced and complex. Frank emphasizes this, sharing that “most people think of literacy as words on a page. That has to change. Media ARE texts designed to be read, analyzed, constructed and reconstructed.”
In clarifying the evolution of media literacy, he notes, “The truth is media literacy is this huge umbrella that encompasses many topics (propaganda, bias, stereotypes, representation, agenda setting, and more). Unfortunately, the phrase media literacy today is being used to mean everything from information literacy to digital literacy. It is much different, and I am finding that real media literacy has gotten lost in these conversations.”
Indeed, there are so many new forms of ‘literacy’ as the types of media content, mechanisms for generating them, their almost universal accessibility, and viral nature of content has overhauled traditional media. To conceptualize the interplay between these forms of literacy, Frank shared this report by the RAND corporation, which specifically lays out the different types of literacies in existence today.
According to the report, “At its core, media literacy refers to the abilities to access, analyze, evaluate, and communicate various media messages,” which has recently grown to “focus more on competencies related to participation and creation.”
Other literacies include:
The types of literacies don’t end there though. Feel overwhelming? Yeah, me too. But there are connective threads that weave throughout these, which are often those competencies specific to media literacy – to critically analyze content, to be informed, and to question. Media literacy fosters the ephemeral and highly sought after 21st century skills, serves as a prerequisite to digital citizenship, and acts as a foundation to literacy as a whole.
Technology changes our relationship with media and the nature of how we consume it. For example, when using social media networks or news apps, feeds are tailored based on a person’s pauses or clicks, which leads to the singularization of content to a person’s pre-held worldview.
And when considered in the context of other media trends – for example, the fact that most adults don’t read more than a headline before reposting an article and over 75 percent of adults couldn’t identify fake news – the outlook becomes much more stark. In essence, people are reading curated lists of headlines, personalized to their preferences, and are unable to discern what it is real or what is fake and likely won’t take the time to click into the article to do the work.
What’s more, a recent study by Stanford found that “82 percent of middle schoolers couldn’t distinguish between an ad labeled sponsored content and a real news story on a website.”
Additionally, over two-thirds of students shared that they wouldn’t mistrust a post by a bank executive arguing for better financial planning.
And, “nearly four in 10 high-school students believed, based on the headline, that a photo of deformed daisies on a photo-sharing site provided strong evidence of toxic conditions near the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in Japan, even though no source or location was given for the photo.”
To this end, Frank bluntly states that “Social media is feeding into the obsession of satisfying people’s need to have something quick. Unfortunately, that leads to superficiality. A headline or a tweet are simply summarizations – and readers need to understand that there is always more to the story.”
As Frank puts it, “there are many excellent sources of information, IF you know where to find it. And if readers will take the time to explore reliable and trustworthy sources.” To this end, he shared this media bias infographic, which is especially helpful and can serve as a quick reference point for news consumers to understand how their preferred news sources carry their own biases and perspectives.
He continues, “Media literacy emphasizes reflection. Current advice also includes stopping and verifying what one reads, hears, and sees. Researchers are also advising…lateral reading in order to verify what’s online.”
To help demonstrate what this means, Frank shared this video series that offers three strategies, derived from the process followed by professional fact checkers, to identify what is factual and fictitious.
One) Investigate the source. Determine whether the publisher of this content is legitimate simply by searching the name of the organization followed by ‘Wikipedia’. The page that populates in the search results will tell whether it’s a trustworthy source.
Two) Find the original source. When an article shares a study, report, or piece of data as evidence, go to the original source and repeat the process above.
Three) Look for trusted work. Websites like Factcheck.org and Snopes will tell whether a story is purportedly true or not; or simply google the story and see how and if other are reporting on it.
Ultimately, illegitimate, inaccurate, and biased news still exists, but media literacy helps consumers to navigate through the ‘noise,’ find what is true, and construct their own opinions and judgements on the matter.
The trend of media illiteracy is concerning because media has such a significant impact on how we process events around us and is instrumental in keeping us informed on critical subjects, including how to vote. Moreover, in a democratic society, it’s essential people have access to quality information and are equipped with the tools to seek this out.
And this is where Frank’s passion lies – filling the knowledge and skills gaps that exist today by focusing on education. In a later article, we will dive into how media literacy is taking shape in the education space and what educators can do to advance this work.
The fact is that media literacy is a worldview – it cultivates a different perspective to everything we read, see, and hear. It’s counterculture in a lot of ways to the quick snippets of information that inundate us every day. Media literacy attempts to cut through this, to reframe how people understand and conceptualize information, data, and media. This worldview is essential to democratic and digital citizenship and, ultimately, enhances how we live; media literacy is liberating – it enables us to form our own judgements, educate ourselves, and model for others.
To end, I’ll share this image Frank offered as a message to readers.