Universität Wien

051913 VO Introduction to media education (2024S)

Registration/Deregistration

Note: The time of your registration within the registration period has no effect on the allocation of places (no first come, first served).

Details

Language: German

Examination dates

Lecturers

Classes (iCal) - next class is marked with N

Tuesday 05.03. 16:45 - 18:15 Seminarraum 7, Währinger Straße 29 1.OG
Tuesday 19.03. 16:45 - 18:15 Seminarraum 7, Währinger Straße 29 1.OG
Tuesday 09.04. 16:45 - 18:15 Seminarraum 7, Währinger Straße 29 1.OG
Tuesday 16.04. 16:45 - 18:15 Seminarraum 7, Währinger Straße 29 1.OG
Tuesday 23.04. 16:45 - 18:15 Seminarraum 7, Währinger Straße 29 1.OG
Tuesday 30.04. 16:45 - 18:15 Seminarraum 7, Währinger Straße 29 1.OG
Tuesday 07.05. 16:45 - 18:15 Seminarraum 7, Währinger Straße 29 1.OG
Tuesday 14.05. 16:45 - 18:15 Seminarraum 2, Währinger Straße 29 1.UG
Tuesday 28.05. 16:45 - 18:15 Seminarraum 7, Währinger Straße 29 1.OG

Information

Aims, contents and method of the course

Didactic goals

The didactic goals of this lecture as an introduction to media education are to provide a general understanding of the basics of pedagogical theories, models and thinking styles in the context of the scientific history of media education. A main emphasis is placed on the interdisciplinary overlap between media education and computer science. In addition to the individual lectures, a compact (digital) text archive is made available, which is intended to provide an initial approach to the internal differentiation of pedagogical theory. In this way, crucial conceptual milestones in the history of (media) education are identified, presented and explained. The general arc of the lecture is based on questions of media literacy in order to reach action-oriented (media) pedagogy at the end.

Content

In the course of the lecture, the material and focal points of media education detailed below will be treated and discussed chronologically on the respective dates.

Dates / basic texts

00 Tuesday March 5th: Organizational matters / Introduction

01 Tuesday March 19th: Competence / Media Competence / Basic Digital Education (Baacke)
Supporting text:
01 Baacke (1996) Media competence as a network

02 Tuesday April 9th: Media competence / media performance
Supporting texts:
02.1 Barberi et al. (2018) Media literacy and media performance (Editorial MI)
02.2 MEDIENIMPULSE Vol. 56 No. 4 (2019) Media competence and media performance

03 Tuesday April 16th: Media socialization / educational sociology
Supporting text:
03 Bourdieu (1988) Homo academicus - Categories of professorial understanding (excerpt)

04 Tuesday April 23rd: Theories of media education I. Game / language game / computer game
Supporting text:
04 Meder (1996) The language player (article)

05 Tuesday April 30th: Theories of Media Education II: Digital Humanism
Supporting text:
05 Werthner et al. (2019) Vienna Manifesto for Digital Humanism

06 Tuesday May 7th: Media theories / media studies
Supporting text:
06 Barberi_Schmoelz (2017) Media theories

07 Tuesday May 14th: Habitus / Medial Habitus / Digital Habitus
Supporting text:
07.1 MEDIENIMPULSE Vol. 61 No. 4 (2024) Habitus - Medial Habitus - Digital Habitus (Editorial)
07.2 MEDIENIMPULSE Vol. 61 No. 4 (2024) Habitus - Medial Habitus - Digital Habitus

08 Tuesday May 21st: Action-oriented media education
Supporting text:
08 Schorb (2017) Action-oriented media education

09 Tuesday May 28th: Film viewing(s) / final discussion

Exam dates

First exam date:
Tuesday June 4th, 2024 4:45 p.m. - 6:15 p.m. Seminar room 7, Währinger Straße 29 1st floor

Second exam date:
Tuesday June 18th, 2024 4:45 p.m. - 6:15 p.m. Seminar room 7, Währinger Straße 29 1st floor

Methods

In terms of practical teaching, elements of the flipped classroom should be implemented at the same level. The lecture also follows the principles of relational web didactics (Moodle, homepage, text download, Power Point presentations, etc.). In between, the material is also discussed in marble groups...

Assessment and permitted materials

- Parallel to the lecture reading of some short introductory texts.
- In addition to attendance, active participation in the discussion as much as possible
- Marble groups to discuss the material
- Final single-choice test

Minimum requirements and assessment criteria

- Parallel to the lecture reading of some short introductory texts.
- In addition to attendance, active participation in the discussion as much as possible
- Marble groups to discuss the material

Examination topics

The exam material will be presented with PowerPoint during each lecture and then made available as a pdf in the Moodle system. The following aspects of media pedagogy will be covered in the exam:
Textübersetzung
Ausgangstext
But untethered and extraterritorial though they may be, the elites aren’t “at sea” in the same way as the majority they rule. On the contrary, their power derives from the nimbleness and flexibility they enjoy. But in the conditions of liquid modernity, the rest of us can’t commit to or rely on anything solid as we once might have; there are no solid forms taking shape to anchor us. Jobs, relationships, values, and spiritual beliefs become contingent—and so, inevitably, do gender and sexuality. For Bauman, this was a crisis; for the queer theorist, it is emancipatory. The celebration of liquid modernity is integral to the methods and “findings” of queer theory. Recently, the academic journal Qualitative Research published a queer-studies paper investigating how fans of shota—a Japanese genre of self-published erotic fiction featuring young boys—experience sexual pleasure. The researcher’s method was to masturbate while reading these stories, and to describe how he felt. While the article produced predictable outrage, it also demonstrated how the obsession with melting away norms leads to frivolous, unscrupulous thinking and research. The journal retracted the paper after public backlash. Scholarly publishing, the source of all the “expertise” we are constantly enjoined to trust, is now just another liquid, impermanent form. Sexual and gender categories have indeed become fluid, at least in places where liquid modernity is advanced. But was this caused by edgy academics? No. On the contrary, to use a term such people are fond of, the causation was “structural.” Generalized liquefaction was underway long before queer theorists first babbled out polysyllabic neologisms like “heteronormativity” or “homonationalism.” Just as recent calls to “abolish the family” arrived after family solidity had already declined, so queer theorists argue for a fluidity of gender that is increasingly a fait accompli. More than perhaps any other system of thought, queer theory “goes with the flow” of liquid modernity, and certainly poses no threat to the oligarchs who thrive amid this chaotic state of affairs. No wonder, then, that corporations have embraced it, or at least a third-hand version of it. Despite their radical pose, queer theorists are at best chroniclers of personal styles and behaviors that transgress the norms of the vanished social order of the past century. At worst, they generate apologetics for an unstable, liquefied future that is already here.

01 Tuesday March 19th: Competence / Media Competence / Basic Digital Education (Baacke)
02 Tuesday April 9th: Media competence / media performance
03 Tuesday April 16th: Media socialization / educational sociology
04 Tuesday April 23rd: Theories of media education I. Game / language game / computer game
05 Tuesday April 30th: Theories of Media Education II: Digital Humanism
06 Tuesday May 7th: Media theories / media studies
07 Tuesday May 14th: Habitus / Medial Habitus / Digital Habitus
08 Tuesday May 21st: Action-oriented media education

Reading list

Baacke, Dieter (1973a): Kommunikation und Kompetenz: Grundlegung einer Didaktik der Kommunikation und ihrer Medien, Weinheim/München: Juventa.
Bourdieu, Pierre (1988): Homo Academicus, Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp.
Foucault, Michel (1981): Die Ordnung des Diskurses, Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp.
Hönigswald, Richard (1997): Geschichte der Erkenntnistheorie, Hamburg: Meiner.
Krämer, Sybille (1988): Symbolische Maschinen. Die Idee der Formalisierung in ge-schichtlichem Abriss, Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft.
Meder, Norbert (2004): Der Sprachspieler. Der postmoderne Mensch oder das Bildungsideal im Zeitalter der neuen Technologien, Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann.
Meyer-Drawe, Käte (1996): Menschen im Spiegel ihrer Maschinen, München: Fink.
Niesyto, Horst (2009): Handlungsorientierte Medienarbeit, in: Handbuch Mediensozialisation, hrsg. von Ralf Vollbrecht und Claudia Wegener, Wiesbaden: VS-Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, 396-403.

Association in the course directory

Last modified: Tu 19.03.2024 11:05