On Media Formatting,
Entertainment and
Critical Thinking
Gravitas --
November 27, 2007
by Hunter Finch
Critical thinking,
integral to creative and strategic thinking, banks
on
effective communications. It is easy to blame media or a distracted or
disinterested public for our social inability to think well. But, this
is only one more red herring. The responsibility for successful
communications lies ultimately with the sender; not with the receiver;
or the
media … It's the sender's responsibility to get the receiver's
attention. It's
the sender's job to pick the medium or mix of media that will get the
receiver's attention and deliver the message best. It's the sender who
molds
the message into media and sends the message through media to targeted
receivers. And it's the sender who makes sure the message has been
received and
understood by receivers within the communicator's targeted range of
acceptability … In the context of a situational comedy, or as an
element of
light humor in discussions between people in other media formats, or as
its own
media format, "entertainment" is just one of many ways to get and
hold the attention of receiving audiences. Yet, in the context of news
and current
events coverage, it generally distracts … But, "entertainment" --
even "edutainment" -- has its own array of formatted logic,
sequencing, and continuity. There are many kinds of entertainment:
Music.
Theater. Humor. It can be highly discursive set into other contexts
seeking
objective levels of communion, or it can be highly appropriate, even
supportive. Is entertainment always the right medium for the message
between
engaged communicators and receivers on issues of social gravitas or
consequence? No! Can it be used discretely and effectively in news and
current
event presentations. Yes! … Yet, isn't reasoning, well-integrated
inquiry,
discourse, and discovery among and between engaged minds, as Michael
has
suggested, potentially more "entertaining" to inquiring minds than
any muse or gimmick imposed onto space, time, or interaction by another
media
format?" Critical communications require their own media formats … If
media choice is ultimately the responsibility of the communicator --
not media,
not receiving audiences -- isn't it the responsibility of communicators
to find
or create the media they need? And, don't you think it's the job of
communicators to "dissent" with the limited media formats that are
pushed onto them by media owners and representatives? … If you agree
it's the
engaged thinking driven by communicators that needs to push media
owners for
new kinds of media formats more conducive to deeper levels and grids of
engaged
complex thought, isn't this a form of dissent? Dissent implies more
than disagreement.
It would almost have to be proactive … We have words, language, text,
images,
graphics, and online media that offer a range of critical media formats
that
are static. But, critical thought is sometimes advanced with
demonstration
media such as videos, DVDs, podcasts and vodcasts, etc. What better
kinds of
media formats do critical thinkers need? … Finally, is this line of
questioning, itself, "dissent under a broader definition?" And, as
communicators, don't we have an obligation to design or create media
formatting
in line with our message requirements? Is it simply enough to say, "the
media programmers, media syndicators, or media owners need to do
something" when in fact it is we communicators that are the potential
users. When we point finger at others we inhibit our ability to say
clearly,
accurately, relevantly, logically, and significantly what needs to be
said?
And, as this suggests, done.
###
Does
Critical Thinking Encourage Dissent?
SonomaLight
-- November 23, 2007
by Hunter Finch
It is in our nature to
sometimes take short cuts in our daily thinking and
routines. While these shortcuts can sometimes lead to discovering new
ways of
doing things differently and better, they frequently change our
outcomes with
unintended consequences that can make things much worse. For example,
the
notion that "critical thinking encourages dissent" is quite different
from the concept that "critical thinking sharpens one's ability to
dissent
constructively when thinking requires it." The former suggests an
objective precondition to thinking. The latter suggests a cognitive
readiness
to take a position when one's thinking leads to a well-considered
conclusion. Today's news and commentary media -- some with
legacies in
principled, timely, constructive, objective, well-communicated
political satire
and courageous critical dissent -- too often appear to be taking short
cuts
with their intellectual product. You see short cuts in editorials,
where
reporting is unclear, inaccurate, irrelevant, superficial,
insignificant and
highly subjective. You see short cuts in media policy, where the
editorial or
program format sacrifices substance and significance for "splash
value" and entertainment. And, you even see short cuts in media brand
positioning. Some media short cuts have become systemic. For
example, there
seems to be a major non-sequitur in play within our media organization
policies
that requires contributing writers and on-air talent to be edgy,
negative, or
cynical first as a precondition for their contributing anything that
might also
be objective, constructive, and significant. Where did cynicism replace
skepticism as the operative concept for news and commentary? I'm sorry
but I
don't think "muckraking" is a substitute for well-constructed,
independent, skeptical thinking that may or may not dissent from
majority
consensus on our social issues. Nor do I think critical dissent evolves
from
muckraking. I'd argue that when media set out to be cynical and
negative on
issues as their primary objective, they undercut an ability to look
openly into
an issue and provide healthy skeptical, constructive, objective and
clear
critical dissent about it. What do you think? When we
"encourage dissent," aren't we really intending to say "think about
this issue and dissent if and when your thinking leads you
there?" Do you think our media culture is shortcutting its
editorial responsibilities by confusing cynicism with skepticism?
Have you ever been a party to conversations where editors and
publishers openly tell their contributors to dissent negatively and
cynically as preconditions to conducting or accepting thorough
critical commentary? Or, do you believe the media intentionally
ignores these nuances to build audiences and ratings for capital gain
at the expense of our social discourse and values? How pervasive
do you think these practices are?
###
Is
the Practice of Plea Bargaining Just?
SonomaLight --
November 21, 2007
by Hunter Finch
In the context of media advancing information on
prosecutorial claims about suspects and hearings in progress, do you
think the
U.S. legal system is working at cross purposes with its own ideals?
Should
names of the detained, arrested, or accused be advanced or leaked to
media
before verdicts are reached at trial? If not, should laws for leaking
be made
more strict and leakers prosicuted more strictly? Does the
prosecutorial tactic
of charging people for crimes, even when there is insufficient or
sometimes no
evidence, working at odds with the presumption of innocence until guilt
is
proven? Is the practice of offering the accused a plea bargain on
trumpted up
charges in exchange for a plea of guilt to lesser charges before a
judge, a
form of extortion? Should prosecuters be allowed to freely use their
license to
intimidate and impose unwarranted pressure on those for whom there is
little or
no evidence to suggest guilt? Has our legal system extended itself
beyond the
law? If not, what laws need to be changed? Should grand juries be
allowed to
announce their findings prior to trial? Should the media be allowed in
to cover
grand jury proceedings prior to the actual trial?
###
Does
Critical Thinking Add to Overload?
Gravitas –
November 13, 2007
by Hunter Finch
College students are dealing with "information overload." They
complain about having "too much to learn in too little time." And
most faculty are attempting to cover entirely too much material in a
semester
course. So, it's common to wonder, "Does an emphasis on critical
thinking
in the classroom add to this overload?"… We need to move away from an
emphasis on content coverage and towards an emphasis on deep
understandings
about the most fundamental concepts in our courses. When students are
taught in
the didactic mode -- when they are "dumped on" -- most cannot
adequately articulate even the most basic concepts of a given subject
at the
end of a semester’s course. They forget anything they may have preped
up for a
lot more easily than anything they ever actually "learned.". Remember,
most students
take years of classes in science, history, math, language arts, etc.,
and yet
they cannot accurately state what science is, why it is important to
think
scientifically, what history is and why it is important to think
historically,
what math is and why it is important to think mathematically, etc? … We
have
been on the content coverage bandwagon for many years, and the volume
of
content we are asking students to learn is increasing exponentially at
accellerating and compounding rates of complexity. Even our best
students are
limited in what they can conceptually learn and apply over the course
of one
semester. So, as we design our courses, we need to ask ourselves
questions such
as these: "If my students learn nothing else in my classes, what would
I
want them to learn?" And, "What concepts within the targeted content
are the most crucial for them to understand and utilize for the rest of
their
lives?" In other words, we need to teach for significance. Nobody
understands or does everything well. Our challenge is to get everyone
understanding and doing at least one thing well. This said, it's
essential to
optimize learning for significant understandings in at least one or
several
domains on a case by case basis before pushing a content dense
curriculum.
Substantive understandings in any one domain or discipline often serves
as a
foundational pro forma for further learning in that domain as well as
others.
As students succeed in their critical understandings and commitments in
formative domains and disciplines they are also learning how to learn
critically in other domains and disciplines for life … The fact is we
have
little time with our students. Most of what we want to teach, we simply
do not
have the time to teach. Thus, we must begin with the most significant
ideas and
concepts in our subjects. We must help students grasp and apply those
ideas
deeply so that those ideas take root and continue to live, grow, and
process
information in their minds across their individual interests and
throughout their
lives. When critical thought becomes the standard in the classroom, as
in life,
the issue of "overload" generally evaporates for teachers as well as
students. Learnining is only difficult when you don't know how to do
it.
Conversely, learning consumes you when you have learned how to learn.
Thus,
"overload" becomes a non issue when you are critically equipped and
compelled to learn about the domains and disciplines that most interest
you. That's
my sense of it. What's yours?
###
Where
Do I Apply Critical Thinking?
Gravitas
-- November 2, 2007
by Hunter Finch
For me, critical thinking is a soliloquy. I
talk to myself
constantly, much to the frustration of others as well as myself. The
suggestion
that we merely apply critical thinking after doing it, as opposed to
think
critically about something we believe, say, and do while believing,
saying and
doing it, seems a little strange to me. The idea of applying critical
thinking
to something you're going to do as opposed to thinking critically
before,
during and after doing it suggests one merely needs to think before
doing.
As I understand it,
critical thinking is like a continuous
stream of light that projects outward and reports back continual
insights and
understandings on presupposed activity before, during, after, between
and
across domains in progress. It isn't something you do in the "critical
thinking department" before moving on to another department where
critical
thinking isn't needed.
That said, my greatest
failure -- and there are many -- is
probably a tendency to not hear and understand what others mean by what
they
say even when I'm listening critically to what they are saying. Or, on
the flip
side, to say what I mean, not just so others might understand what I
mean but
so that they can't misunderstand what I mean. In other words, my
greatest
failure to apply critical thinking is most likely my use, misuse and
overuse of
language to say what normally can be said better, more simply and to
the point.
It's easy to fool myself
into thinking I know what people
mean by what they say, and that others understand where I'm coming from
by what
I have said, but, how do you ever really know exactly what someone
means when
they haven't said what they mean? Or when you superimpose your own
interpretations of what you think they mean onto a discussion or
application in
progress? Or when you try to rephrase their language to make sense of
it? And,
how do you commune with those around you to share relevant insights and
support
collective interests so that everyone's on the same page so you can
move ahead
together in common applications?
We each come from different backgrounds
and interests. Our
language and our points of entry on discussions are more often than not
skewed.
Is it egocentric to assume you know what someone is asking or thinking
by what
they have said or haven't said? Is it right to interpret and rework
someone
else's language in the interest of progress? Is it pretentious to
engage in
conversations on issues when you're the only one in the discussion?
Does one's
failures and successes to apply critical thought in their ongoing
critical
soliloquy ever end? Or, is it one's critical soliloquy that makes the
application worth doing in the first place?
###