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Media Education Goes to School examines the struggles involved in integrating media education across the curriculum at a small urban school. Based on quasi-ethnographic research - specifically semi-formal individual and group interviews with twenty-one participants and participant-observation - the text focuses on how students understand and make meaning of media education in their schools, and what they know about urban education and urban school reform. The book argues against the neoliberal ethos that continuously harms urban youth and the rhetoric of new school reform that replicates, not…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Media Education Goes to School examines the struggles involved in integrating media education across the curriculum at a small urban school. Based on quasi-ethnographic research - specifically semi-formal individual and group interviews with twenty-one participants and participant-observation - the text focuses on how students understand and make meaning of media education in their schools, and what they know about urban education and urban school reform. The book argues against the neoliberal ethos that continuously harms urban youth and the rhetoric of new school reform that replicates, not heals, subjected social positions. Media education is a necessity in secondary schooling, but it cannot be thoroughly integrated into schools until significant structural changes are made in education: this book positions the site of change through the struggles students express with their own experience of education.
Autorenporträt
The Author: Allison Butler is Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication at Western Connecticut State University, where she teaches courses in media literacy, TV criticism, mass communication, and media aesthetics. She also teaches graduate courses in media education at New York University in the Media, Culture and Communication Department. Her research interests include integrating media education into secondary schools, young people's relationship with media and education, the depiction of education in media, and the development of urban education and urban educational reform.