Adult Media Literacy in Australia: Attitudes, Experiences and Needs

Tanya Notley, Simon Chambers, Sora Park, Michael Dezuanni

Research output: Book/Research ReportResearch report

Abstract

In November and December 2020 we surveyed a sample of 3,510 adult Australians to understand the different types of media they use, the value they place on different media activities, their confidence in their own media abilities and their access to media literacy support. The findings show that most Australians use several different types of media each day, they believe a diverse range of media activities are important in their lives, but their confidence in their own media abilities is unexpectedly low. We also find that far too many Australians don’t have access to any media literacy support when they need it. The findings demonstrate that if we accept that media is integral to all aspects of our lives, far more needs to be done to address the needs of groups who are the least confident about their media abilities and who have access to the least support. The findings also show that increasing media literacy can yield direct benefits for increasing people’s civic engagement. (THE INFOGRAPHIC CAN BE DOWNLOADED HERE: https://doi.org/10.26183/e8a7-9908)
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationPenrith, N.S.W.
PublisherWestern Sydney University, Queensland University of Technology, University of Canberra
Number of pages81
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

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