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[Commlist] cfp - Questioning public policies in media education
Mon Dec 16 10:27:43 GMT 2019
Extended deadline for proposals to the next international conference
(14th & 15th May 2020 in Créteil, Paris, France) organized by the Center
for Youth and Media Studies and the Canada Chair of Research for Media
Education and Human Rights.
The theme will be "Questioning public policies in media education".
For all details and submissions (before January the 7th) :
https://cejem2020.sciencesconf.org/
For further information, please contact the Center for Youth and Media
Studies (Centre d’études sur les jeunes et les médias
<https://jeunesetmedia.wixsite.com/jeunesetmedias>) :
(jeunesetmedias /at/ gmai.com) or (marleneloicq /at/ gmail.com)
++++
International Conference
Organised by the Center for Youth and Media Studies (Centre d’études sur
les jeunes et les médias)
and the *Canada Research Chair **in Media Education and Human Rights*
*May 14th -15th 2020*
Université Paris Est Créteil (UPEC), Créteil, France
*/Questioning public policies in media education /*
*/Keynote speakers: /**/David Buckingham /*/(//Loughborough University,
Kings College London)///
/and**/*/Christine Trueltzsch-Wijnen /*/(Stefan Zweig University of
Education, Salzburg)/*//*
/The Center for Youth and Media Studies (« centre d’études sur les
jeunes et les médias ») gathers researchers from various disciplines
around emerging issues in the field of media education. In order to
reinforce this research network, each year, since 2013, its members
organize an international event around themes of media education, youth
media use, educational media, and critical pedagogy. In partnership with
the Canada research chair for media education and human rights, this new
edition will focus on public policies regarding media education. Relying
on various levels of analysis (local, territorial, national and
international level) as well as various disciplines and methods, the
conference will confront theoretical, epistemological, axiological and
socio-political positions that orient research on media education. The
relations between public policies, training systems, stakeholders and
publics (politicians, educators, scientists, students…) will
particularly be investigated./
//
Media education is a rich and complex field that emerged through
educational practices (not only at school and in the family, but also
during extracurricular activities), research, and public policies.
Indeed, since it exists, media education has been trying to not only be
integrated into school curricula, but also in official phrasing
regarding social issues that have long been addressed by the educational
community.
While the media were developing, the movement for media education
integrated these evolutions as new challenges for the school system. For
example, since 2012, media education and information education have been
put together to form EMI in France (“éducation aux médias et à
l’information”), and MIL – Media and Information Literacy – on an
international level. The current efforts towards data literacy also
reflect the evolutionary nature of issues addressed by media education,
skills that should be developed in the field, and public policies and
supporting educational practices that are needed in order to deal with
the complexity of the media landscape.
A general movement in favour of media education emerged in the eighties
at the local, national and international level. In many countries,
educational reforms enabled the creation of programs dedicated to media
education. Depending on the context, they were more or less integrated
or transversal, responding to different strategies, and unevenly
deployed. More and more countries have progressively developed media
education in their curricula. They are supported by institutional
discourses and prescriptive programs of various quality, complexity and
ambition. The discourses as well as the modalities of these programs are
in close connection with socio-political contexts and the specificities
of the educational systems that support them. In their own way, and
together with actual educational practices and media education research,
these policies are ‘saying’ what media education is today. Investigating
public policies in media education thus means asking ourselves what this
education is, how it is imagined, built and deployed, and how it is used
in the field of practice according to specific local contexts,
stakeholders’ representations, educational resources and available
training, national requirements, international recommendations, and so
on. Eventually, it means to question global socio-educative projects as
well as political and economic interests that are involved since they
may follow different, or even conflictual, goals.
Since the beginning of the century, the emergence of digital media and a
diversification of formats have diversified the ways information is
produced and spread, which in turn have changed media use and media
culture. These changes mean that we need to broaden the field of
intervention in media education and think constantly about discourses
accompanying these transformations (prophetic speeches about general
access to knowledge, to quote only this one). As part of this constant
technological development, data, traces and algorithms (as well as
artificial intelligence) are crucial. Let us emphasize that these
technical phenomena play an essential role in ordinary communication
practices and reveal that a real communicational engineering has been
developed by the individuals.
The questions about changes in media use lead us, more broadly, to
reflect on the imbrications between cultural and political aspects of
media education, and investigate how these aspects are taken into
account by public policies.
To investigate the relations between media education and public
policies, international and comparative approaches are welcome since
they can identify global phenomena and put light on local specificities.
Propositions can be related to the following themes:
**
**
*1- Institutional discourses about media education*
**
The institutionalisation phase of media education is central in its
acknowledgment and development. At different moments of its history, and
in various places, it has been presented both as an educational
opportunity - or necessity - and as a way to deal with crucial societal
issues. Thus, the presence of media education in institutional
discourses is both a proof of its role in social projects, whose
modalities and ideologies depend a lot on the local context, and a way
to orient its potential development on a given territory. It is
therefore possible to question, among other things, the axiological
dimensions of media education in institutional discourses and how they
legitimize it. Also, how they take professional practices and research
into account can also be investigated while tensions and debates raised
by these pedagogical orientations (for instance, the role of informatics
in digital education) can be addressed.
*2 - Territorial levels and stakeholders’ strategies*
**
Depending on the country and on the school system, media education is
institutionalized on different territorial levels. Some nations may
deploy educational policy strategies at the national level relying on a
centralised political system, presupposing a homogeneous territory in
terms of equipment, training and dedicated staff. Other nations develop
these policies on more local levels, under various modes of governance
due to specific administrative procedures, or even socio-political or
cultural specificities of their territories (regions, states…). These
variations allow networks to be developed, as well as institutional,
political, educational and cultural stakeholders’ strategies dealing
with specific educative and cultural realities. As part of this
movement, supra-national organisations try to initiate a collective and
global dynamic, aiming, among other things, at integrating curricula
into national public policies. The strategies of stakeholders who set up
media education projects, whether they be public (schools, public media
institutions, but also the police, for instance), controlled by a
Ministry, or private (insurance companies, commercial or media groups,
and so on) can thus be investigated.
*3 **- Competency frameworks in public policy*
**
For about twenty years, following changes in the media landscape,
discourses and frameworks about competencies and their qualification
were developed: they refer, for instance, to informational, media or
digital skills, e-skills, coding or programming skills… At an
international or national level, public policies rely on competency
frameworks that aim at accompanying individuals “their whole life”.
These frameworks are produced to determine which skills should everyone
possess. It is interesting to observe that they share both a political
and an economic perspective. On the one hand, these skills are
considered necessary for empowering individuals and developing a
critical mind, which are both essential to act as a citizen in a
democracy. On the other hand, their role in “employability” and career
development, in a perspective of economic growth and competitiveness, is
emphasized. Moreover, it is possible to question the norms that are
visible in them; how do these frameworks present skills as a
/pharmakon/, a form of intervention on men and women so that they can
meet the needs and expectancies of society? Their process of creation
and inscription in official education instances can be put into question.
**
**
**
*4- Questions surrounding certification and evaluation of public policies*
**
How media education is integrated into the curricula, and its level of
integration, can be very different, depending on the school system. In
this regard, the institutional construction of tools aiming at
evaluating their “effects”, the indicators chosen, and the certification
of the students involved can be analysed. ,
Media education meets educative and societal issues that can be
addressed by school systems, popular education, or private
organisations. How these various stakeholders are coordinated has an
impact on the capacity of public policies to evaluate and build this
education. The critical analysis of these certifications and evaluations
may lead the researcher to investigate the underlying norms that
determined their conception, as well as the knowledge and skills they do
not cover. Building on this, it will be relevant to observe whether they
take informal skills into account and integrate them, and on the other
hand, to study how they divide skills using various qualification
processes (certified, formal, school competencies).
A historical perspective would be useful to determine how these
institutions rely on the results of these evaluations to make their
educational strategies evolve.
*5- Resources and training facilities*
**
Questioning public policies also leads us to investigate training
schemes, and pedagogical resources through which they become
operational. Media education can be apprehended through discourses that
define it, assign it to certain norms, accompany it; or through the
social and educational intervention measures that give it shape. These
measures include pedagogical resources that can take various forms
(toolkits, dedicated websites, manuals, games, and so on). Depending on
the stakeholders and on the public (at school or not, children, adults,
seniors, and so on), they may or may not integrate the frame prescribed
by public policies. The papers in that area can be about analysing forms
and use of pedagogical resources regarding media education, and their
links with public policies. They can also use comparative approaches
between various training systems, in order to show to which extend they
treat media and information education differently.
*Abstract submissions*
Abstracts must be submitted before December, 18^th 2019 in French or
English (maximum of 7500 characters, including spaces and bibliography,
Times New Roman, font size 12, simple line spacing, 5 keywords, and a
title) *only* through the website cejem2020.sciencesconf.org
<http://cejem2020.sciencesconf.org/>.
In the abstract, we ask you to remain *anonymous*, including when you
refer to previous publications. They will be double-blind peer reviewed
by the scientific committee. Abstracts, and communications, may be given
in French or in English but there will be no translation nor
interpretation during the event.
For further information, please contact /Le Centre d’études sur les
jeunes et les médias/ : (jeunesetmedias /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(jeunesetmedias /at/ gmail.com)>
Or visit https://www.facebook.com/jeunes.mediasor
https://jeunesetmedia.wixsite.com/jeunesetmedias
After a new evaluation, a selection of papers will be gathered in a
scientific publication, which terms will be specified later on.
*Important dates*
Abstract submission deadline: December 18^th , 2019 extended deadline,
now January 7^th, 2020
Notification of acceptance or refusal: February 15^th , 2020
Conference: May 14^th and 15^th , 2020
Regarding the publication:
Paper submission for evaluation: November 1rst, 2020
Notification of evaluation: End of January, 2021
Final full-texts: March 2021
Planned publication: Fall 2021
*Organising committee*
Sabine Bosler (Université de Haute-Alsace, Cresat)
Florence Colin (UPEC, INSPE)
Isabelle Feroc Dumez (Université de Poitiers, Techne)
Sarah Labelle (Université Paris 13, LabSIC)
Marlène Loicq (UPEC, Céditec, Présidente du Centre d’études sur les
jeunes et les médias)
Normand Landry (Téluq, Crisis, Canada Research Chair in Media Education
and Human Rights)
Aude Seurrat (Université Paris 13, LabSIC)
*Scientific committee*
Éric Bruillard (ENS, IFé, EDA Descartes)
Jean-François Cerisier (U. de Poitiers, Techné)
Pascale Delormas (UPEC, Céditec)
Pierre Fastrez (UCLouvain, GReMS)
Bettina Henzler (Universität Bremen - ZeMKI / IRCAV)
Rudolf Kammerl (Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg)
Anne Lehmans (U. de Bordeaux, IMS, Rudii)
Vincent Liquète (U. de Bordeaux, IMS, Rudii)
Pierre Moeglin (U. Paris 13, Labsic)
Claire Oger (UPEC, Céditec)
Sophie Pène (U. Paris Descartes, Fdva-Cri)
Laurent Petit (Sorbonne Université, Gripic)
Daniel Peraya (U. de Genève, Tecfa)
Alice Krieg-Planque (UPEC, Céditec)
Claudia Riesmeyer (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München / Institut für
Kommunikationswissenschaft und Medienforschung)
Patrick Verniers (IHECS, IAME)
Carsten Wilhelm (U. de Haute-Alsace, Cresat)
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