Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/30839
Author(s): Foá, C.
Tomé, V.
Margato, A.
Paisana, M.
Crespo, M.
Cardoso, G.
Date: 2023
Title: Roles of journalists in media literacy initiatives: Trainees and trainers. Continuity, collaboration, and sustainability of media literacy trainings to mitigate disinformation in Portugal
Journal title: Profesional de la información
Volume: 32
Number: 6
Reference: Foá, C., Tomé, V., Margato, A., Paisana, M., Crespo, M., & Cardoso, G. (2023). Roles of journalists in media literacy initiatives: Trainees and trainers. Continuity, collaboration, and sustainability of media literacy trainings to mitigate disinformation in Portugal. Profesional de la información, 32(6), e320621. https://dx.doi.org/10.3145/epi.2023.nov.21
ISSN: 1386-6710
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): 10.3145/epi.2023.nov.21
Keywords: Journalists
Journalism
Training
Disinformation
Media literacy
Collaboration
Continuity
Sustainability
Teachers
Assessment
Portugal
Abstract: This paper aims to foster the debate on Media Literacy (ML) projects with a focus on disinformation. We analyse initiatives carried out locally in Portugal, considering the principles of ML, the necessary development of skills and competences, as well as the importance of the journalistic action and the consequences of platformization on professional practices. Mixed methods are applied to collect and analyse quali-quantitative data from ML projects and trainings involving multiple stakeholders. Inquiring three independent samples (editors-in-chief, journalists trained in ML, teachers trained by journalists in ML) the research questions address the importance of journalists’ participation in ML within different roles, as well as the training quality and projects’ assessment. Findings show a lack of specialised knowledge, practical tools, and continuous training as well the need for more tailor-made programs and evaluation resources that allow for the creation and promotion of more effective ML training programs. This contribution is therefore two-folded: a) it aims to enhance the operational aspects of media training in the field, based on a continuous improvement logic and b) it explores a specific evaluative example on how the feedback from training can help improve research efforts in the media literacy field. Conclusions systematise the assumptions, stemming from an articulation of ML stakeholders’ perspectives, that guide the implementation, improvement, and assessment of training: collaboration, continuity, and sustainability. These inductive categories allow for the development of theoretical-practical dimensions of the processes for evaluating innovative training against disinformation which may in turn have an inoculation role in the wider public sphere. We suggest improvements to the methodological-operational processes to involve journalists, to do follow-up, assessment, and implementation of wider training projects, contributing to applied research.
Peerreviewed: yes
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:CIES-RI - Artigos em revistas científicas internacionais com arbitragem científica

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