Adult Literacy and Television - An Annotated Bibliography (2000)
From May 18 -20, 2000, thirty-six participants from around the world met at the 11th Annual Summer Institute of The Centre for Literacy to consider how television has been used in many countries to create public awareness and to teach literacy skills to adults. This Institute brought together some of the pioneers in the field to meet with practitioners and policy-makers, share their experiences, and explore directions for the future. To provide historical context, The Centre produced an annotated bibliography tracing the use of television in adult literacy from the 1960s to the present day (See Resources, p. 36 ). Finally, to involve participants in the experience of making television as well as talking about it, part of the Institute was taped at Bravo! Studios by Canadian Learning Television. To work with CLT and to benefit from some of the specialists attending Summit 2000, an international conference on Children, Youth and Media, the Institute was held in Toronto.
Television is a powerful medium. It is accessible around the world and across the socio-economic spectrum. The poorest home in North America usually has a television set, while 20% of Americans did not have a telephone in 1996. The 1995 International Adult Literacy Survey (IALS) confirmed that adults with limited literacy in the industrialized world watch more television than higher educated adults do. Critics immediately leaped to the conclusion that television was to blame for a low level of literacy. However, the researchers pointed out that it was more likely that this group uses television as their primary source of information because they find reading too difficult.
Most teachers of literacy have tended to see adult literacy and television as the enemy. But there is a growing understanding that the nature of literacy is changing, and that learning to read and write print is not enough. Words, image and sound are creating new literacies.
With this in mind, educators are challenged to find ways of using this medium to address the learning needs of adults at the basic skills levels. Since early teaching models in selected US states in the 1960s and the first national television initiatives in the mid-70’s in Britain to reach this audience, many national campaigns and teaching programs have been developed around the world. They have all focused on print literacy. None of them has been sustained. What are the possibilities for the 21st century?
Participants at the Institute offered insights and argued from their own experience in creating television for adult basic skills, in using television, in having their students create video productions; a contingent from Ireland, where a massive national campaign got underway this fall, turned heads in describing a return to an even older technology — radio—for both awareness-raising and instruction.
Thumbnail sketches of presentations:
From multi-million dollar investments to low-budget home-made interventions, these and other examples illustrated the complexity of the subject.
A high point of the three days was an afternoon’s Colloquium filmed by Canadian Learning Television at Bravo! Studios and hosted by TV personality Daniel Richler. Three panels explored and argued about what television can offer the adult literacy community and about the challenges facing that community around the world. Can television teach? Can it only motivate? Do national campaigns work? What can teachers do with television? How do print and media literacy connect? What are appropriate roles for volunteers in literacy? How does culture affect viewer expectations of television? How do race, gender, and ethnicity make themselves felt in literacy classrooms and in television representations of adult learners? Do we stereotype learners? Do we patronize them? Issues that are often avoided or skirted were aired at the Colloquium. The tapes of that exchange have been edited, shown on Canadian Learning Television (in December 2000, to be repeated in February 2001), and made available for purchase.
The Summer Institute Televised Colloquium was funded by The National Literacy Secretariat, and the Office of Learning Technologies, Human Resources Development Canada
These articles appeared in Literacy Across the Curriculumedia Focus - Vol.15 No.1)