Mil Preliminary Examination
Mil Preliminary Examination
Mil Preliminary Examination
PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION
MEDIA AND INFORMATION LITERACY
DIRECTIONS: Encircle the letter of the correct answer. USE BLACK PEN ONLY.
1. Accentuate an individual's capability to exercise his/her fundamental human rights, specifically the right
to express his/her opinion using any kind of media platform and the right to access information
responsibly.
2. Broadly describes all channels of communication, including everything from printed paper to digital data.
3. Refers to the news and information that reaches a large number of people. Also, it is a combination of
different content forms.
4. Television, radio, books, magazines, and the internet are examples of?
6. The invention of the transistor ushered in this age. People harnessed the power of transistors that led to
the transistor radio, electronic circuits, and the early computers. In this age, long distance communication
became more efficient.
7. People used the power of steam, developed machine tools, established iron production, and the
manufacturing of various products (including books through the printing press)
8. The Internet paved the way for faster communication and the creation of the social network. People
advanced the use of microelectronics with the invention of personal computers, mobile devices, and
wearable technology.
9. People discovered fire, developed paper from plants, and forged weapons and tools with stone, bronze,
copper and iron
14. Refers to the many ways our information environment is polluted – contents are fake, used out of context,
or weaponized to attack certain individuals or groups of people.
15. Refers to information that is false, but the person sharing or disseminating it unknowingly perceives it as
something true.
18. Refers to content that contains false information with the deliberate intention to mislead or deceive the
audience.
19. When genuine content is re- circulated out of its original context
20. Persons’ bylines used alongside articles they did not write, or organizations’ logos used in videos or
images they did not create
23. Refers to information that is based on reality but is used to inflict harm
24. Media consisting of paper and ink, reproduced in a printing process that is traditionally mechanical
26. Media such as radio and television that reach target audiences using airwaves as the transmission
medium
27. Means meeting at a point, it is synonymous to the words: join, unite, intersect, merge, connect, coincide
28. Happens when different (two or more) media sources join together.
29. A place in which literary, musical, artistic, or reference materials (such as books, manuscripts, recordings,
or films) are kept for use but not for sale
31. Type of library that serves cities and towns of all types
33. Type of library that are in specialized environments, such as hospitals, corporations, museums, the
military, private business, and the government
a. Indigenous Communication
b. Indigenous
c. Indigenous Knowledge
d. Indigenous Media
35. Knowledge that is unique to a specific culture or society; most often it is not written down
a. Indigenous Communication
b. Indigenous
c. Indigenous Knowledge
d. Indigenous Media
36. Transmission of information through local channels or forms. It is a means by which the culture is
preserved, handed down and adapted.
a. Indigenous Communication
b. Indigenous
c. Indigenous Knowledge
d. Indigenous Media
37. May be defined as forms of media expression conceptualized, produced, and circulated by indigenous
peoples around the globe as vehicles for communication
a. Indigenous Communication
b. Indigenous
c. Indigenous Knowledge
d. Indigenous Media
38. A global computer network providing a variety of information and communication facilities, consisting of
interconnected networks using standardized communication protocols.
39. These are codes, conventions, formats, symbols and narrative structures that indicate the meaning of
media messages to an audience
40. These are systems of signs that when put together create meaning
41. Show what is beneath the surface of what we see (objects, setting, body language, clothing, color, etc.)
or iconic symbols that are easily understood
42. Are ways in which equipment is used to tell the story. This includes sound, camera angles, types of shots
and lighting as well as camera techniques, framing, depth of field, lighting, exposure and juxtaposition
43. Use of language style and textual layout (headlines, captions, speech bubbles, language style, etc.)
45. Refers to creations of the mind, such as inventions; literary and artistic works; designs; and symbols,
names and images used in commerce.
46. A sign capable of distinguishing the or services of one enterprise from those other enterprises.
47. A legal term used to describe the rights that creators have over their literary and artistic works
48. An exclusive right granted for an invention. It also provides the patent owner with the right to decide how
- or whether - they can be used by others.
49. Constitutes the ornamental or aesthetic aspect of an article. It also may consist of three-dimensional such
as the shape or surface of an article, or of two-dimensional features, such as patterns, lines or color
50. This means you can use copyrighted material without a license only for certain purposes.