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Media Literacy

This guide provides introductory information into the concepts of Media Literacy, resources to learn more, and campus activities during Media Literacy Week.

Calendar of Events

Oct 21 - Access

12:00-1:00 pm

Workshop: Accessing Paywalled Newspapers

Have you ever tried to read an article in the New York Times, nola.com, or a historical newspaper online, only to hit a paywall? Tulane University Libraries (TUL) can help! We provide access to thousands of digital newspapers from the 17th-century to present and around the globe.  

In this workshop, you’ll learn:

  • how to access The New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, nola.com, and other major U.S. and global newspapers through TUL
  • which newspaper databases TUL subscribes to and owns; the scope of their contents; and how to strategically search them by keyword, date, location, and other parameters

Register now!


Oct 22 - Analyze

12:00-1:00 pm

Literacies! a 4-part audio series launches

Listen to the first episode of Literacies! In this four-part series, we’re talking to experts about why media, data, information, and financial literacies are critical skill sets for modern life. We’ll give you a quick dive into what it means, how it impacts you, and things you can do to skill up.

Hosted by Katherine Hicks, our first episode launching today features a conversation between host Katherine Hicks, Dr. Muira McCammon, and Media Services librarian lisa Hooper. They talk about Media Literacy and, more specifically the concept of platform power, exploring what it is, what it means for you, and ways you can regain agency.

Watch here for an access link or follow Tulane University Libraries on social media.


Oct 23 - Evaluate

12:00-1:00 pm

Workshop: A Framework for Recognizing Misinformation, Disinformation, and Information in Life and at School

At school and in life we are bombarded with information. When information comes to us, we get to choose which information to engage with, but often these choices are snap decisions heavily resting in emotion and our existing knowledge rather than any intentional evaluation process. At other times, we seek information out and, while we expect our information seeking strategies will lead us to reliable sources, we are still somewhat limited by our accumulation of experiences and knowledge. In all situations, we are subjected to reliable information, misinformation, and disinformation and sometimes it’s not easy to distinguish. This workshop provides a framework that balances emotion and existing knowledge-based decision making with intentionality. In other words, this workshop will give you tools to navigate the noise.

Register now!


Oct 24 - Create

10:00-11:00 am

Workshop: Video Editing with Adobe Express

Learn how to make high quality video productions using Adobe Express with Adobe expert Jim Babbage. In this session, you’ll learn how to import your video, trim, resize, merge, add backgrounds and overlay images, and caption.

Jim Babbage

Register now!


Oct 24 - Act

1:30-3:00 pm

Workshop: Zine Your Research

Zines can be a radical and community-minded method of disseminating research outside of traditional academic publishing. Learn how academic zine makers are using the medium to challenge ideas of “authority”, “expertise”, and “scholarship” in creative, collaborative, and accessible ways. At the same time, dive into the basics of the zine format and discover how the unique form lends itself to a radical reimagining of research. In the end, make your own research zine!

Register now!

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