SLK 1 Media Info. Literacy Gubatana PDF
SLK 1 Media Info. Literacy Gubatana PDF
SLK 1 Media Info. Literacy Gubatana PDF
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FOREWORD
This kit also aims to guide students to become multi-skilled in different ways of
learning, literate in the modern trend of technology and become effective in using
media and information in different contexts. Furthermore, it gears towards honing
their communication skills, creativity, social, and media literary in the global arena.
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Module 1
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What I Know
A. In your answer sheet, draw five [5] boxes then draw a line below each box. Arrange the
jumbled words below and write the words in the box. On the space below the box write a
word that associates with the word inside the box.
COMINACTIONUM EDIAM NATONIFRMIO
SEGAMSE AIEORPELRSNNT
_____________________ ________________________
A. Identify the following social media applications apparently used today. Write your
answer in your answer sheet.
1. 2. 3. 4.
5. 6. 7. 8.
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What is In
Read the statements below. Then, provide your answers by completing the letters inside
the boxes in each number.
U E
2. It is the response generated by the message that was sent to the receiver through the
channels.
E D A K
3. The one who gets the message that was transmitted through the channels.
R C I E
R N M I T G
H N E S
E O I G
7. It is the process by which the receiver translates the sender’s thoughts and ideas so
they can give meaning.
D C I G
N I E
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What is New
Activity 1
a. Check out a message you just recently received from your mobile phone.
Note: To those who do not have phone, you may use letter that you received. You
may also use an article from any print materials.
b. Analyze the message guided by the following questions:
After you have responded to the above questions, try to push your analysis a little further by
pondering on this question:
a. What form did the sender use so that the message can be transmitted to the
intended receiver? (4 pts)
c. Try visualizing the process that starts with the sender and ends with the receiver. Fill in
the diagram below. (10 pts.)
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What is It
Think about how many ways by which you send a message to somebody. In a face-to-
face communication, you try to use your body to say something, stress a point, or even to
express emotions. You can speak with a louder voice to emphasize a point, you can cover
your face to express sadness, or chuckle to express amusement. Your shoulders shrugging
will probably say you have given up or you simply do not know. In case you are not able to
communicate in a face-to-face manner, you can send a letter, an electronic mail, or use one of
the many platforms of the internet for chatting.
Types of Communication
People communicate face-to-face with someone they know or someone who is a complete
stranger to them. In whatever way, they are engaging in interpersonal communication. Turow
(2009,8) defines interpersonal communication as “a form of communication that involves two
to three individuals interacting through the use of their voices and bodies.”
There are times when you cannot and need not to talk face-to-face, so communication
becomes mediated through the use of devices such as pen, telephone, or computer. This is
known as mediated interpersonal communication. Technology stands in between the parties
communicating and becomes the channel by which the message is sent or received.
The same goes to your barkada huddling over a magazine and exchanging thoughts on
the issue being talked about in an article.
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communication. These messages flow through faculty meeting, memorandum posted in the
bulletin boards for the personnel to see, or in conferences and seminars.
What makes up a message? It may seem like a simple term but it deserves more serious
attention. Let us try to unpack the word.
The capital city of Leyte, Tacloban, bore the brunt of the storm along with adjacent
municipalities like Palo and Tanuan. Tacloban lies in a cove where the sea water narrows,
making it more vulnerable to a phenomenon called “storm surge”, which was largely
responsible for the 6,290 dead, 1,785, and 28,626 injured in the storm’s aftermath (DOST
Project NOAH Blog).
What could account for the huge number of dead, missing and injured?
While it is true that the extent and magnitude of the expected Typhoon was
communicated as part of pre-disaster readiness, there was a term that did not get across the
intended receives.
The term was “storm surge”. They did not know what a storm surge was. They did not
know that it could be deadly, that the strength of its waves could topple houses and kill huge
numbers of people in the low-lying areas.
“There was a difficulty in explaining to the public what a storm surge is. We were aware
of the height, but not the strength”, Romualdez said (GMA News 2013). Apparently the
information disseminated failed to convey the deadly threat.
The misconception of storm surge is the main factor that brought massive deaths and
destruction to Tacloban City.
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Presidential Communications Operations Office Secretary, Sonny Coloma, insisted the
government had sufficiently prepared for Yolanda – pre- positioning disaster relief items and
launching massive citizen information campaigns, but admitted that “perhaps we could have
communicated the danger better”. Even the Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical and
Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) admitted that while all necessary public
warnings were issued, there could have been more precise information in explaining to the
public the magnitude and gravity of a storm surge.
When tragedy strikes, it is normal for citizens to lose faith in the communication
networks and systems that are managed by the government. Now, PAGASA is bent on
working with linguists to ensure that people understand threats posed by nature’s wrath,
including typhoons, floods, earthquakes and other calamities.
Let us start off with the texting phenomenon to illustrate how communications are
affected by media and information. When you send a text message to another person, you are
using the cellphone as a means of communication. Your message sent through the cellphone
is transmitted by the signals provided by the mobile phone company and lands to the intended
receiver’s cell phone. It is a form of mediated interpersonal communication assisted by the
technology provided by cellphones.
The phenomenon started out quite easily. On January 16, 2000, a text message landed on
somebody’s phone enthusiastically calling out concerned citizens to mass up at the EDSA
Shrine, after 11 senators voted to block the opening of a sealed envelope that contained the
evidence of President Estrada’s corruption and hidden wealth. The public responded with
outrage over the apparent move to block the truth. The text message could have borne these
words: “FULL MBLSN 2DAY AT EDSA” “(Full, mobilization today at EDSA”) and “GO 2
EDSA WEAR BLCK BRING UR FRENDS” (“Go to EDSA, wear black, bring your
friends”). By 8:00 p.m., around 20,000 had already gathered at the EDSA Shrine, and the
days that followed saw more people, not just from Metro Manila but from the nearby
provinces as well.
According to McQuail (1969, 2), mass communication “comprise the institutions and
techniques by which specialized groups employ technological devices (pres, radio, film, etc.)
to disseminate symbolic content to large, heterogeneous, and widely dispersed audiences.”
McQuail’s definition signals us to two basic concepts which cue us to the defining
features of mass communication – first, technological devises and second, the magnitude and
scope of its audiences.
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Is the EDSA II event, propelled by texting as Rafael (2003) contends, a form of mass
communications or just a more complex illustration of mediated interpersonal
communication?
These two forms of communication are very much interrelated. Technology brings
symbolic and complex messages to large, heterogeneous, and widely dispersed audiences.
For instance, your friend Sandy is the president of a broad coalition advocates for good
governance. He has been relentlessly engaging in various sectors of society to expose
corruption in the government. He comes to your house to tell you that plans of massing up a
the EDSA shrine are now in place, and many like-minded organizations are supporting this
move. He visits to your house so you can have a face-to-face communication; this is
interpersonal communication.
Suppose he is unable to drop by your house and, instead, sends you a text message; this
is mediated interpersonal conversation. Since he is a leader of an organization, his associates
find it appropriate to record in video camera a short spiel where he makes an appeal to his
friends from all over the city to come and join the rally at EDSA. The video message lands in
your email. This is a fine example of mediated organizational communication.
However, it is highly possible that your friend Sandy is invented to a talk show, so he can
inform the public of his call to a rally at the EDSA Shrine. Here is where you encounter his
appeal that is persuasive enough to get you and your friends to pick up your bags and head to
the EDSA Shrine.
The three levels of communication mentioned above achieved the same purpose, albeit in
rather different ways and through different channels. The last one – the opportunity for Sandy
to be guest in a talk show – uses a media organization that is vast, complex, and highly
structured. This is where the difference lies.
To get Sandy as a guest entailed a series of processes. A production meeting for the
week’s episodes generated a series of actions that allowed network executives to determine
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the priority issues of the day. They have probably thought that the call for a president’s ouster
is imminent and that the coalition representing this call is broad enough and deserve to be
heard by the viewing public. Sandy is contacted by the network executives, and is adequately
oriented on the nature of the program and the questions that may be asked by the panelists. It
is also likely that Sandy was provided some tips on how to convey his message and how to
avoid certain words that may seem politically incendiary to the Board of Censors or even to
the advertisers. In a way, these institutions that are external to the broadcast network have
stakes in the programs that are aired. Let us try the chart the nature of Sandy’s messages
using the 7 element or cycles of a message.
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Interpersonal communication, inasmuch as it is mediated by technology, appears to be
limited in each reach; mass communication, however, is able to reach huge audiences at the
same time. Mediated interpersonal Communication too appears like messages created by
individuals or perhaps teams, while mass communication is created by huge, mostly powerful
and extensive organizations.
In the examples we have cited earlier, the huge number of Filipinos who gathered at the
EDSA Shrine in a mass action that showed popular sentiments against an equally populist
president, was a combination of both mediated interpersonal communication and the reach of
mass communication. While the first one involved the crafting of messages by an individual,
the second one involved a media organization that has the capacity to command a huge
viewership.
A telephone conversation between the President of the Philippines and his Chief of Staff
qualifies as interpersonal communication. But the President and his Chief of Staff appearing
before national television to communicate a call or rally the people to action, would then
constitute mass communication.
The involvement of huge and expansive organization is central to the idea of mass
communication. Mass communication is carried out by organization which is part of a bigger
assembly or network of institutions that form an industry. Like the manufacture of products
in a factory assembly line, they produce media in an industrialized setting, involving a
remarkable size of workers with specialized knowledge, machinery, technology, and channels
of the distribution and dissemination of knowledge.
What’s More
Activity 2. Accomplish the Venn Diagram below. Compare and contrast mediated
interpersonal communication and mass communication.
,, ,,
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Activity 3. Identify the elements of communication used in the given situation. Use the table
below.
Situation: Mrs. Diosdado gives her instructions to the students in her online class. Then the
students ask Mrs. Diosdado for clarifications.
2. Source
3. Encoding
4. Channel
5. Receiver
6. Decoding
7. Feedback
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What I Have Learned
Reflect on the learning that you gained after taking up this lesson by answering the
questions below.
1. What is the importance of media in communication?
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What I Can Do
A. Complete the table below. Cite one situation of a mass communication and fill in the
table based on the elements of communication used in the situation. (2 pts each
element)
Situation:
Mass Communication
Source
Encoding
Channel
Receiver
Decoding
Feedback
B. Write at short narrative paragraph after accomplishing the instructions below. (10 pts)
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ASSESSMENT
A. Write MIC if the situation falls to mediated interpersonal communication and write
MC if the situation belongs to mass communication.
______1. Your elementary bestfriend sent you an invitation for her house blessing
through telegram.
______2. The school principal sent a copy of his report by fax.
______3. Kathryn Bernardo shared his success life stories in People Magazine.
______4. Someone expressed public apology over the radio.
______5. A robbery that happened occurred in our barangay last night appeared on the
newspaper.
______6. Some of the letters of Dr. Jose Rizal to Leonor were published in many books
worldwide.
______7. Your teacher gives you a call informing that you are officially enrolled.
______8. Gov. Gwen on her live speech in a Facebook page expressed her dismay to the
people who did not seriously follow quarantine protocols.
______9. Since there should be no face-to-face transaction between the teachers and the
students, the SSG President sent his project proposal to the SSG Adviser through email.
______10. Raffy Tulfo in his program made a “prank” to Ivana about disobedience to
quarantine protocols.
B. Identify the elements of communication present in each number.
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9. You affirmed to the teacher’s statement.
10. Your teacher listens to your opinion about a certain topic.
Answer Key
What I Know
A.
COMMUNICATION MEDIA INFORMATION MESSAGE INTERPERSONAL
Note: Responses on Word Association may vary.
B..
1. Instagram 6. Skype
2. Tiktok 7. WhatsApp
3. Youtube 8. Facebook
4. Twitter
5. Messenger
What is In
1. Source 6. Encoding
2. Feedback 7. Decoding
3. Receiver 8. Noise
4. Transmitting
5. Channels
What is In
Note: Answers in questions 1-4 may vary
4.. (4th instructions)
Source/Sender Transmitting Encoding Channel Receiver
Feedback Decoding
What’s More
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Activity 3
Situation: Mrs. Diosdado gives her instructions to the students in her online class. Then the
students ask Mrs. Diosdado for clarifications.
2. Source
Mrs. Diosdado
3. Encoding
Mrs. Diosdado gives her instructions
4. Channel
Laptop/Internet
5. Receiver
Students
6. Decoding
7. Feedback
The students ask questions to the Mrs. Diosdado.
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ASSESSMENT
A B.
1. MIC 1. Message
2. MIC 2. Feedback
3. MC 3. Source/Sender
4. MC 4. Channel
5. MC 5. Decoding
6. MC 6. Noise
7. MIC 7. Message
8. MC 8. Feedback
9. MIC 9. Feedback
10. MIC 10. Decoding
Sources:
Media and Information Literacy by Maria Jovita E. Zarate
https://www.iconfinder.com/icons/4102579/applications_instagram_media_social_ico
n
https://www.stickpng.com/img/icons-logos-emojis/tech-companies/tik-tok-icon-circle
https://www.cleanpng.com/png-youtube-logo-2088264/
https://www.cleanpng.com/png-social-media-computer-icons-tulane-university-face-
606795/
https://logodownload.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/facebook-messenger-logo-
0.png
https://logodownload.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/skype-logo-0.png
https://www.pngwing.com/en/free-png-zvfwh
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https://www.pinterest.ph/pin/769341548825702120/
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