Module 3 MIL
Module 3 MIL
This module was designed and written with you in mind. It is here to
help you master the context of Media and Information Literacy. It contains
varied activities that can help you as a Senior High School student to not just
be an information literate individual, but a creative and critical thinker as
well as responsible user and competent producer of media and information.
After going through this module, you are expected to:
1. Defines information needs, locates, assesses, organizes and
communicates information.
2. Demonstrates ethical use of information.
What I Know
Let us determine how much you already know about the Media and
Information Literacy by answering the questions below. Use your worksheet
for your answers.
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4. Information literacy is best understood on how we navigate the complex
and networked world of the internet.
5. The Internet is an increasingly important part of everyday life for people
around the world.
6. The three-letter code preceded by a dot (.), simply known as the “search
engine site”.
7. Information seeking is relatively synonymous to the idea of research.
8. Books, newspapers, and other periodicals are example of Print format
information.
9. When you are information literate, you are able to evaluate what
information you need, what to discard, and how to use the information you
selected.
10. When you are able to judge the “ Potential value of Information,” you will
not be able to maximize its use.
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Module
Information Technology
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What’s In
Before we go further, try to answer the questions below, this are some
questions that comes into our mind when we talk about Information Literacy.
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What’s New
1. As a student, what do you think are the usual instances and reasons
for your need of information?
2. What tasks have you done in the past that required searching
information for you to complete them.
What is It
The World Wide Web—usually called the Web for short—is a collection
of different websites you can access through the Internet. A website is made
up of related text, images, and other resources. Websites can resemble other
forms of media—like newspaper articles or television programs—or they can
be interactive in a way that's unique to computers.
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Who Puts Information on the Internet?
There are many kinds of Internet sites that you might find during the
course of a search – sites created by different people or organizations with
different objectives. The three-letter code preceded by a dot (.), simply known
as the domain, gives you a fairly good idea of who is publishing the internet
site.
.com
Mostly commercial entities, some of which are
profit-oriented.
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Sources of Information
Sources of information, drawn from the internet or otherwise, can be
categorized into the following:
1. Popular Publications: Most of what rules in the print and non-print
media are popular publications with the general public as its target
audience. Included under this category are journalistic articles, features
articles, manuals, flyers, fact sheets, and even blogs by netizens. They
serve to both inform and entertain the general public.
Format of Information
FORMAT DESCRITION
Materials produced and collected from print
Print resources (books, newspapers, and other periodicals,
manuscripts, correspondence, memoranda, loose
leaf materials, notes, brochures, etc.).
Digital materials are information materials that are
Digital Formats stored in an electronic format on a hard drive, CD-
ROM, remote server, or even the Cloud. These could
be electronic books, database websites, video, and
audio materials. These materials may be accessed
with a computer and/or through the internet.
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Materials collected using analog technology in video
Audio and Video (television, video, recordings) tools presented in
Format recorded tapes, CDs, audio-cassettes, reel to reel
tapes, record albums, etc. As differentiated from
digital technology, these sources of information are
recorded using analog technology which means data
is recorded in advance from one point to another.
Analog devices read the material by scanning the
physical data off the media.
What’s More
Patience and diligence are virtues of a good information seeker. The World
Wide Web (WWW) is not the end, but the means for your information search.
DIRECTIONS: Answer following in your answer sheet.
Go back the time when you were learning how to read and write. Ask yourself
the following questions:
1. How did you learn to read and write?
2. How did you gain the skills that enabled you to read and write?
3. What are the five most important and meaningful things you can do
with your ability to read and write?
4. How did these skills stay with you through the years?
5. What did you do to enhance these skills?
6. Do you think there is still room to enhance these skills?
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What I Can Do
3. As a child of parents who would like to know more about the current trends
in gadgets and fashion
Assessment
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7. Information seeking is relatively synonymous to the idea of research.
8. Books, newspapers, and other periodicals are example of Print format
information.
9. When you are information literate, you are able to evaluate what
information you need, what to discard, and how to use the information you
selected.
10. When you are able to judge the “ Potential value of Information,” you will
not be able to maximize its use.
B. Instruction: Read the following questions and answer them briefly. Write
your answers on your answer sheet.
1. If you use traditional sources of information such as print, broadcast, and
electronic media, which among these do often refer to and why?
2. What good and bad practices do you commit during information search
and sharing?
Additional Activity
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