Media Literacy Education for All Ages
A Special Issue of the Journal of Media Literacy Education
Guest Editors
Päivi Rasi, Heli Ruokamo, and Hanna Vuojärvi
Faculty of Education, Media Education Hub, University of Lapland, Finland
Proposals are invited for papers for a special issue of the Journal of Media Literacy Education on the theme of Media Literacy Education for All Ages. The call is open for the international Media Education Conference 2019 (MEC 2019) participants and scholars who don’t intend to attend the MEC conference in Salla, Finland, in April 2019. MEC is a small, informal conference, where participants exchange ideas and information on media literacy education, particularly the roles of media in teaching, learning, society, and psychosocial well-being across all ages. MEC is organized by the Faculty of Education’s Media Education Hub at the University of Lapland, Finland.
The Journal of Media Literacy Education provides a forum for established and emerging scholars, media professionals, and educational practitioners in and outside schools. An extended conceptualization of literacy, media literacy education helps individuals of all ages develop the habits of inquiry and skills of expression needed to become critical thinkers, effective communicators, and active citizens in a world where mass media, popular culture, and digital technologies play important roles for individuals and society.
Individuals’ media literacy education needs and interests change over the course of their lives. For example, in infancy, media literacy education is expected to support well-being, emotional and cognitive development, and social relationships. In old age, media literacy education may be especially important to support cognitive functioning and the abilities to obtain and critically assess health-related information and use online health and medical services. In today’s learning society, digital technologies and media play central roles in learning through the life span. Multidisciplinary research and development of pedagogical models to support learning with digital technologies, therefore, are still topical themes for media literacy education. Areas of interest include, for example, online and mobile learning, playful and game-based learning, and simulations, video, and virtual reality in learning.