Module 1 (Lesson1-3) - The Role of MEdia in The Society

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MODULE ONE

THE ROLE OF MEDIA IN


THE SOCIETY
LESSONS

1. Definition and Types of Media


2. The Power of Media
3. The Media and the Audience

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Lesson 1: Definition and Types of Media

Objectives.
1. Define media.
2. Identify the different types of media.
3. Review the similarities and differences
of different media.
4. Participate actively in the outcomes-
based activities after each lesson.
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Defining Media

• Media simply refers to a vehicle or means of


message delivery system to carry a message to a
targeted audience. Media like TV, Radio, Print,
Outdoor and Internet are instruments to convey
an message to the public.
• Media is the reflection of our society and it
depicts what and how society works.
• Media, either it is printed, electronic or the web
is the only medium, which helps in making
people informed. It also helps in entertaining
the public, educate and make people aware of
the current happenings. Media has today https://bit.ly/3JJfgLT
become the voice of our society.
Types of Media

• Print Media
• Broadcast Media
• Online Media
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Lesson 2: The Power of Media

Objectives
1. State how the media shape public understanding of an issue;
2. Relate how framing, priming, and agenda setting affect
communicative process.
3. Draw out how framing technique, priming, and agenda setting
are most likely used by reporters in existing news articles;
4. Participate actively in the outcomes-based activities after each
lesson.
The Power of Media

• The media have a vast reach. They can communicate to a large


number of people all at once and influence how they view issues
of the day and, subsequently, how they want issues to be
addressed.
• A radio or television station with 600 watts of power can broadcast
to any radio or television set within 60 kilometers. Boost that to
10,000 watts and the broadcast can encompass whole regions.
Something similar may be said of newspapers. While lacking
broadcast’s reach, newspapers have staying power: they can be
kept, filed, and referred to again.
The Power of Media

• During the 1986 People Power Revolution, the media were such a
force that they shaped the issues and became a platform for the
people’s dissent.
• In 2001, the media played again a role in the ousting of former
president Joseph Ejercito Estrada. The media revealed his alleged
malfeasance in office, and, later, covered and provided context to
his trial; so much so that people began to get engaged, and, using
a media platform available to them — mobile phones and internet-
enabled computers — directly involved themselves in the protest
action that led to Estrada’s ouster.
The Power of Media

• Communities are also influenced by the information they receive


from the media.
• There is a high level of trust involved when the media transmit to
the general public. Even personal opinions, when aired or printed,
are often taken as fact. Likewise, leaders are influenced by
information reported by the media.
• This information can affect crucial decisions that will eventually
impact the lives of communities.
How Media Affects Consumers

Framing
• It involves a communication source presenting and defining an issue
(Vreese and Lecheler, 2012)
• Frames can be episodic, depicting social issues like poverty as
limited to events only and not placed in a broader interpretation or
context, as Shanto Iyengar (1990) explains: “Poverty is covered in
terms of personal experience; the viewer is provided with a
particular instance of an individual or family living under economic
duress” (p. 22).
• Or the framing can also be thematic. In thematic framing, the
narrative is less about the experience of particular victims or
individuals and more about societal or collective outcomes.
How Media Affects Consumers

Framing
Examples of thematic media frames, according to Neuman et al. as cited by
De Vreese and Semetko (2004, p. 95), are the following:
• Human impact – focuses on descriptions of individuals and groups affected
by an issue
• Powerlessness – refers to the dominance of forces over weak individuals or
groups
• Economics – reflects the preoccupation with “the bottom line”, profit,
and loss
• Moral values – the often-indirect reference to morality and social
prescriptions
• Conflict – the journalistic practice of reporting stories of clashing
interpretation
How Media Affects Consumers

Framing
According to Fairhurst and Sarr (1996), these are some of the framing techniques that
are often observed in media reports:
• Metaphor – the comparison of a conceptual idea to something else
• Story (myth, legend) – to frame a topic via narrative in a vivid and memorable way
• Tradition (rituals, ceremonies) – cultural mores that instill significance in the
mundane; closely tied to artifacts
• Slogan, jargon, catchphrase, and meme – a catchy phrase that make an object more
memorable and relatable
• Artifact – an object with intrinsic symbolic value, a visual/ cultural phenomenon that
holds more meaning than the object itself
• Contrast – a description of an object in terms of what it is not
• Spin – a presentation of a concept that conveys a value judgement (positive or
negative) that might not be immediately apparent; an inherent bias by definition
(p.125)
How Media Affects Consumers

Priming
• Priming is the ability of the media to provide a context for the
discussion of a given issue, thereby setting the stage for audience
understanding. The concept draws heavily from the political
science research of Shanto Iyengar, Mark Peters, and Donald Kinder
(1982, pp.848-858).
• Priming occurs when exposure to information or an event activates
a construct in the audience’s memories, which then informs
subsequent judgments that they make. News priming, in particular,
often involves exposure to particular news stories on particular
topics, which makes those issues relevant to later political
judgments (Iyengar & Kinder, 1987, p.6).
How Media Affects Consumers

Priming
• Iyengar and Kinder argued that priming is of particular importance
to political evaluations because it changes the standards that
individuals use when making decisions, on the basis of what has
been emphasized in the media.
• It is widely speculated, for example, that Benigno Aquino III, who
was not even originally considered as a nominee by his party, the
Liberal Party, won the Philippines’ 2010 presidential elections in no
small part because of the massive (time and space) media coverage
of the death of his mother, former president Corazon Aquino.
How Media Affects Consumers

Agenda Setting
• Agenda-setting theory, as originally formulated in 1972 by
Maxwell McCombs and Donald Shaw, explains the relationship
between the emphasis that the mass media place on issues and
the importance that media audiences attribute to those issues.
• The press may not be successful much of the time in telling
people what to think, but it is stunningly successful in telling its
readers what to think about. (Cohen, 1963, p.13)
Lesson 3: The Media and the Audience

Objectives
1. Point out the media’s role in a functional democracy;
2. Review the news values present in traditional journalism;
3. Understand where the concept of news values evolved from.
4. Evaluate how positive feedback loop could relate to framing,
priming, and agenda setting
5. Participate actively in the outcomes-based activities after each
lesson.
The Media and the Audience

The media report on an event that happens. The decision to report


depends on the target group of the media house and very often this is
also influenced by news values. The actual list varies but it generally
includes Timeliness, Proximity, Prominence, Impact, Currency, Conflict,
and Oddity.
These themes are mainstays in conventional journalism education and
in-house newsroom instruction, though there is often scant discussion on
how they came to be.
Johan Galtung and Mari Holmboe Ruge (1965) published the article that
led to the emergence of the concept of news values. The article detailed
conditions that increase the likelihood of a news event getting noticed
by journalists for publication.
The 1965 research identified 12 themes grouped into three categories —
Impact, Audience Identification, and the Pragmatics of Coverage.
The Media and the Audience

Under Impact:
• Threshold – Stories that involve an event that affects a larger
number of people will have a larger chance of getting published or
aired than those about events that involve fewer people. Similarly,
stories whose publication or airing will impact a greater number of
people will have a greater chance of being read or seen than those
stories that interest fewer people.
• Frequency – Stories that unfold within the news production cycle,
whether they be daytime breaking news or a previously scheduled
public hearing or press conference, will have a greater chance of
getting published and aired than stories that unfold at intermittent
intervals or those that break outside of the production cycle.
The Media and the Audience

Under Impact:
• Negativity – Stories that are negative in nature — death, damage, disaster
and the like — will have a greater chance of being published or aired than
more positive news, the latter being considered as fluff pieces or light
material.
• Unexpectedness – Stories involving events that are out of the ordinary or
unexpected will have a greater chance of getting published or aired than
stories that are more ordinary.
• Unambiguity or Simplification – Outside of specialized publications,
stories that are simple to write and easy to understand, like and open-
and-shut murder case, will more likely see print and broadcast than those
stories that are difficult to write and even more difficult to understand
for the lay person, like the taxonomy of seaweeds.
The Media and the Audience

Under Audience Identification:


• Personalization – Stories that involve people and their attributes
will have a large chance of publication and airing than stories
involving purely abstract ideas. For example, a personality sketch
of a scientist who recent won an important award will not be
complete if it does not involve some personal detail or two to
humanize the presentation.
• Meaningfulness – Stories that are more relatable to audiences will
have a larger chance of seeing print or airtime than those stories
involving topics that are largely alien to a publication or a
network’s patrons.
The Media and the Audience

Under Audience Identification:


• Elite Countries – In foreign news, stories involving first world
countries and those which are culturally proximate to us have a
greater chance of being aired or published here than stories
involving other third world and global south countries.
• Elite People – Stories that involve people with high status — ranking
politicians and other officials, as well the rich and the famous —
are more likely to see publication and airtime than those involving
ordinary people.
The Media and the Audience

Under Pragmatics of Coverage:


• Consonance – Stories that conform better to what the news
gatekeepers think the audience would like to read, watch or hear
will have a better chance of getting printed and aired when
compared to stories that gatekeepers feel, rightly or wrongly,
would be irrelevant to the audiences they serve.
• Continuity – Stories that build upon what audiences already know
or are aware of will likely see publication and airing more than
stories that have yet to gain momentum.
• Composition – Editors like to mix things up on pages assigned to
them. A light story might be aired or see print in place of a lesser-
degree serious report if all other stories on the page are already
deathly serious.
The Media and the Audience

Under Pragmatics of Coverage:


• Consonance – Stories that conform better to what the news
gatekeepers think the audience would like to read, watch or hear
will have a better chance of getting printed and aired when
compared to stories that gatekeepers feel, rightly or wrongly,
would be irrelevant to the audiences they serve.
• Continuity – Stories that build upon what audiences already know
or are aware of will likely see publication and airing more than
stories that have yet to gain momentum.
• Composition – Editors like to mix things up on pages assigned to
them. A light story might be aired or see print in place of a lesser-
degree serious report if all other stories on the page are already
deathly serious.
REFERENCES
1. Rama, E.K., et.al. (2018). The Conflict-Sensitive Journalism Teaching
Guide: Philosophy and Practice. forumZFD, Commission on Higher Education
– Regional Office XI, PECOJON and the Media Educators of Mindanao, Inc.
2. Singh, G., & Pandey, N. (2017). Role and impact of media on society: A
sociological approach with respect to demonetisation. IMPACT: International
Journal of Research in Humanities, Arts and Literature, 5(10), 127-136.

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