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MAIL Lesson 8

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MEDIA AND

INFORMATION
LITERACY
PREPARED BY:
MS. ELLA MAE
MANGANA
LESSON 8

PEOPLE
MEDIA
HOW WOULD ONE DEFINE
The dictionaryPEOPLE?
defines people as persons,
whether men, women, or children, considered as
numerable individuals forming a group.
HOW WOULD ONE DEFINE
MEDIA?
The dictionary defines media as the means of
communication that reach or influence people
widely.
PEOPLE MEDIA
We may define ‘people media’ as men, women, or even
children that widely influence people by reaching them
through different means. They are the sources of
information and are responsible for disseminating that
information.
There is a need to understand ‘people media’ and
information because people are considered the most
important media. Without people, there will be no
information available in any kind of media.
People and media should be considered equally
important because people create media and
whatever information we have depends on the kind
of expertise a person.
PEOPLE IN
MEDIA VS.
PEOPLE AS
MEDIA
PEOPLE IN MEDIA

They are the people behind another form of


media. They use other forms of media such as
text media, visual media, multimedia, etc. in
disseminating information and imparting
knowledge.
Provide information coming from their expertise of first-
hand experience of events.
• Journalists
• Photojournalists
• Broadcast Journalists
• Multimedia

Media Practitioners
Media Practitioners
PEOPLE AS MEDIA

They are the MEDIA itself. The person


serves as the medium for another person
to learn or acquire new knowledge.
- Highly exposed to and actively using media
- Source of viable interpretation of messages for
lower-end media users
- Opinions are accepted by a group

1. Opinion Leaders
1. Opinion Leaders
2. Citizen Journalism

People without professional journalism training


can use the tools of modern technology and the
internet to create, argument or fact-check media
on their own or in collaboration with others.
2. Citizen Journalism
Journalists are using social media to make
their content available to more people.

3. Social Journalism
3. Social Journalism
4. Crowdsourcing

The practice of obtaining needed services, ideas,


or content by soliciting contributions from a
large group of people and especially from the
online community.
4. Crowdsourcing
Social media is a catch-all term for a variety of
internet applications that allow users to create
content and interact with each other.

5. Social Media
This interaction can take many forms, but some
common types include:
- Sharing links to interesting content produced by third
parties
- Public updates to a profile, including information on
current activities and even location data
- Sharing photos, videos, and posts
- Commenting on the photos, posts, updates, videos and
links shared by others.
5. Social Media

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