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[ecrea] CfP: Special Issue Media literacy as intergenerational project: skills, norms, and mediation
Tue Jul 17 12:05:33 GMT 2018
CfP: Special Issue of MediaEducation: Journal for Theory and Practice of
Media Education.
/Theme
Today's information society is characterized by its permeation of
multifunctional and ubiquitous media. Since a diverse set of media is
most often habitually integrated in daily routines, media literacy is an
«important prerequisite» to deal with media risks and opportunities
(UNESCO 2016). Even more, media literacy has become a key competence for
societal, political, and civic engagement and participation in the 21st
century (Hobbs 2011;
Erstad and Amdam 2013). Its acquirement is most often discussed as a
long-term process during life cycle (Potter 2010), since individuals
need to adjust their media literacy to media changes and also to the
main challenges of the developmental tasks during the different stages
of their lives (Pfaff-Rüdiger, Riesmeyer, and Kümpel 2012) and the
turning points of their biographies. Furthermore, the socialization
regarding media literacy is shaped by diverse socialization agents, i.e.
parents, teachers, peers, and the individual itself (Hobbs 2011).
However, research on media generations demonstrates that living in
different media environments and corresponding socializing environment
leads to diverse media experiences (Naab and Schwarzenegger 2017) and
therefore highly individual sets of media literacy with «differing
levels and uses of literacy competencies according to [...]
environments, needs, and available resources» (UNESCO 2016). The idea of
an entanglement of media changes, lifelong acquirement of media
literacy, and exchange processes between media generations is at the
core of our preconference.
With the Special Issue, we aim at:
1.Answering the following research questions (with theoretical and/or
empirical focus):
Which generation possesses which media literacy skills and norms for
media use? Who and which circumstances mediate media literacy at which
turning point in life cycle? How could media literacy be characterized
as intergenerational project, since changing media use and media access
induce the connection of different generations (and socialization
agents) and also promotes reverse socialization (e.g. from children to
parents)?
2.Bringing together international scholars that study media literacy and
implications of its conceptualization as intergenerational project.
Submissions should address the following aspects:
·media generation specific media literacy skills and norms,
·normative, social, political, and civic implications of (missing) media
literacy,
·mediation (and reverse mediation) of media literacy and influencing
factors,
·inter- and transgenerational exchange of media literacy and media
practices,
·influences of turning points within media biographies and media
generations.
/Submissions
Please submit extended Abstracts of max. 1.000 words plus references
electronically and according to the author guidelines
http://www.medienpaed.com/about/submissions#authorGuidelines until
August 31st 2018 at: http://www.medienpaed.com/author/submit.
Based on these abstracts, invitations for full paper submissions will
sent out by mid of September. Full Paper submissions will be due by
November 30 2018. They will be proofed in double-blind peer reviews.
Final decisions will be sent out in early 2019. Contributions should be
original and should not be under consideration elsewhere. The total
character count must be under 40.000 characters (including spaces,
without abstract, and without references). A narrative abstract of
150–200 words briefly describes the main issues, significant results and
conclusions. Contributions must be submitted with an English and German
title and abstract.
/Editors
If you have any questions, please feel free to contact the editors of
the Special Issue:
Claudia Riesmeyer ((riesmeyer /at/ ifkw.lmu.de)), Thorsten Naab
((thorsten.naab /at/ phil.uniaugsburg.de)), Ruth Festl
((r.festl /at/ iwm-tuebingen.de)) or Christine Dallmann
((christine.dallmann /at/ tu-dresden.de)).
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