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A liberal education should teach students how to think,

 

not what to think.

Image by Yin Yin Low

Introduction and Context: Liberal Education in the
Digital Age

In this digital age, teaching critical thinking, information/media literacy, and narrative analysis is more important than ever.  America's founders and subsequent education groundbreakers  couldn't have anticipated the technological advancements we take for granted, but they understood that in any age, democracy depends on an informed electorate. They established a free press and a free, public, liberal education system to ensure the country's democracy would thrive.

 

Technology has drastically altered education and the free press. Social media, in particular, has blurred the lines between journalism, entertainment, education, and political persuasion. Those unclear boundaries have harmed citizens' ability to stay accurately informed and vote accordingly, which has created the most politically divisive era in American history and put its democracy at risk.


America's political polarization is particularly evident in journalism and education. Both were conceived as "liberal" according to the definition of liberal as democratic, broadly focused, interdisciplinary, open to new ideas, and respectful of diverse perspectives, but many institutions in both fields have shifted in recent decades to uphold a definition of liberal as aligning with the Democrat political party.

Such homogeneity increases the likelihood that biases won't be identified, opinions won't be questioned, and critical thinking won't be engaged, preventing educators from creating the informed electorate that America's founders and public education pioneers envisioned. Students in Generation Z and Generation Alpha were born and raised in this digital and politically divisive environment, so they, more than any prior generation, need skills they can use to navigate its pitfalls.

Empowering citizens and securing democracy requires teaching students to recognize differences among facts, opinions, and narratives; between informing and persuading; educating and indoctrinating. Such discernment requires keen information/media literacy and narrative analysis skills. This site provides educators with resources for teaching those skills.

With gratitude to the Minnesota State Colleges system and North Hennepin Community College for their financial support, I present the following resources for educators' use, provided they give credit to this site:

  • Educator's Guide for Identifying Personal Biases

  • Reviews of materials on Generation Z and Generation Alpha

  • Reviews of materials on journalism in the digital age

  • Materials for teaching journalism

  • Materials teaching critical thinking, media literacy, information literacy, and narrative analysis in a variety of fields

  • Rubrics for evaluating student work

  • Assessment options for measuring student learning.

The materials are available from the site menu above and from the sortable, searchable list that follows the overview below.

Language, Media, and Society: An Overview of This Site's Content

Caring for Words in a Culture of Lies.webp

 Caring for Words in a Culture of Lies, 1st edition, by Marilyn Chandler McEntyre, William B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2009.

​As far back as 2009, scholars credentialed in linguistic and cultural studies were alarmed by the media's bias, sensationalism, divisiveness, and dumbing-down of news. Marilyn Chandler McEntyre is among those scholars, and in Caring for Words in a Culture of Lies, she describes the problem and offers solutions.

 

McEntyre begins with her own and other experts' observations of "a gradual increase in language that is either meaningless or destructive of meaning" and predicts the effects of Postmoderism's spread from academia to K-12 education, tech, government, and the rest of society that have since unfurled  (6-7).

​McEntyre notes that 19th-century newspapers, a primary source of language for the American public, didn't have headlines, just "columns of print that left the reader to sort out what was important in the course of reading" (McEntyre 12). Such print facilitated critical reading and thinking, which fostered openness to ideas and nuanced thought. To increase its audience during the 20th century, however, the media added headlines that increasingly appealed to readers' emotions and told them what or how to think about the stories they announced. Twenty-first-century media built on that trend, shortening and sensationalizing articles in addition to lowering their reading level from 8th-grade to 4th-grade, "train[ing] readers to expect nothing more challenging" (McEntyre 11). While one could argue that simpler language made news accessible to a broader, more diverse audience, it also oversimplified coverage of--and therefore conversation about--complicated events and ideas while shifting readers' role from one of active evaluator to passive consumer. Audiences became increasingly inclined to believe whatever the media said was true at the same time the media increasingly engaged and sought to sway readers' strongest and most immediate emotional reactions to current events.

 

Social media, Twitter in particular, further simplified, sensationalized, and politicized language--and thereby the thoughts, relationships, and culture it shapes--by restricting coverage to hyperbolic soundbites that created a culture of constant outrage and a hostility toward anyone holding a different perspective than the one communicated. Twitter soundbites became catchphrases that spurred action, such as "silence is violence," which eroded language's meaning in an Orwellian manner by insisting that a neutral state that exists in nature (silence) is exactly the same as physical harm actively inflicted by choice (violence). Such inaccuracies primed individuals to expect and even practice violence at the slightest imagined provocation (McEntyre 46). To compete, news media adopted social media's format, creating an echo chamber effect (McEntyre 51). Journalists educated by institutions steeped in Postmodernism perpetuated the effect, pushing it further and deeper into the broader culture.

 

As happens with rapid, widespread, wholesale adherence to a philosophy, Postmodernism's push for theoretical deconstruction of language and everything related to it became actual deconstruction of language and everything related to it. Informed, thoughtful, theoretical deconstruction for evaluative purposes within the academic realm gave way to physical deconstruction of American institutions in the societal realm, as seen by movements to "defund the  police,"  whose proponents claimed simultaneously that they meant the phrase only figuratively and absolutely literally. False binaries replaced spectrums when it came to issues and political stances, such as "you either advocate for abolishing police or you actively uphold white supremacy." Phrases suggesting "you're either with us or against us"  dominated politics, social media, and everyday conversation at both ends of the political spectrum, not merely ignoring but replacing critical thinking with cognitive dissonance. Such false binaries eliminate the possibility that people can coexist by practicing respect for diverse ideas, experiences, worldviews, and the individuals who hold them--the very foundation on which a democracy rests.

The 21st-century media format urges individuals to express every reaction and opinion to a vast audience immediately, increasing conflict and the potential for violence as the echo chamber encourages writer and reader to act on every reaction. The result of this Postmodernism attack on language is an American public more divided than ever, comprised of individuals who consider anyone holding a different perspective an enemy combatant. Evidence abounds in the form of Antifa "direct actions" in Oregon and Washington, the January 6th U.S. Capitol insurgence in Washington,  D.C.,  nationwide clashes between parents and K-12 school boards, and hate crimes that have spiked in urban areas like New York City since 2020.

 

McEntyre suggests that to change current trends, Americans must take more care with language and demand their media and political leaders do the same. She encourages readers to practice precision that "requires not only close and patient observation, but also daring imagination and what Keats called 'negative capability'--the capacity to dwell in paradox or ambiguity without straining after resolution. To inhabit, as it were, two dimensions or points of view at once, and calmly" (54). Only then can we repair America's frayed cultural fabric.

 

McEntyre's book is an essential read, not only for journalism students, but for anyone who wants to live in a world that upholds human complexity and diversity. It is also the basis on which this site's resources were evaluated and/or created to aid educators in teaching critical thinking, information/media literacy, and narrative analysis.

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