MEDIA LITERACY IN THE AGE OF INFORMATION OVERLOAD

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MEDIA LITERACY IN THE AGE OF INFORMATION OVERLOAD

Media literacy is the method of dissecting media content in order to critically analyze it. Media literacy is a crucial skill all media consumers must-have. On the other hand, Information overload is a situation in which you receive too much information at a time and cannot think about it in a clear way. The term was coined by Bertram Gross, a Political Science professor at Hunter College in his paper The Managing of Organizations, published in 1964, long before the internet existed. It was used to describe the inability of decision-makers to reach a quality conclusion when they were presented with a huge amount of data.

Stanley Baran, in the Introduction to Mass Communication, speaks of a term he calls “third-person effect”. This encompasses the idea that as consumers we believe media affects others but not ourselves (24). Being media literate allows us to see that this is untrue and the media does in fact have underlying messages that affect us.


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MEDIA LITERACY IN THE AGE OF INFORMATION OVERLOAD by Global Media Education Council - Issuu