Mad Skills - Global Kids Case Study

Post on 22-Jan-2015

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In 2008-2009, Project New Media Literacies tested the Media Makers Challenge Collection, a set of 30 challenges to explore and practice the new media literacies. This collection was established as a springboard for educators to adopt the new media literacies into their own situation. Media educators from Global Kids used the materials as inspiration to develop Media Masters, an after-school program at the High School for Global Citizenship to integrate the new media literacies into a social issues learning environment. Media Masters helped learners acquire and reflect upon digital media production and analytic skills through youth engagement in participatory media and Web 2.0 tools. This presentation will explore how theory and practice merged to create a conversation, rather than a top-down transfer of knowledge, between participating researchers, practitioners and students.

Transcript of Mad Skills - Global Kids Case Study

Mad Skills Making New Media Skills Accessible to Students and

Teachers Alike

Erin Reilly Research Director Project New Media Literacies USC Annenberg School for Communication ebreilly @twitter www.newmedialiteracies.org and Flourish Klink Research Assistant / CMS grad student Project New Media Literacies MIT

•  Play

•  Performance

•  Simulation

•  Appropriation

•  Multitasking

•  Distributed Cognition

•  Collective Intelligence

•  Judgment

•  Transmedia Navigation

•  Networking

•  Negotiation

•  Visualization

A tool that houses multimedia learning “challenges” to explore and practice the new media literacies and provides a platform for creating user-generated learning activities by teachers and students. © 2009 Project New Media Literacies

1. Concept

2. Concept in context

3. Your turn

4. What do you think?

Challenge Framework

http://techtv.mit.edu/videos/5344-3d

Learning is situational rather than universal.

Learning is transmedia rather than unified and

self-contained.

http://techtv.mit.edu/videos/5352-6b-rafi-on-ice-breakers

Learning is collaborative rather than hierarchical.

http://techtv.mit.edu/videos/5360-8a

Learning is emergent rather than pre-

structured.

http://techtv.mit.edu/videos/5364-9b

http://techtv.mit.edu/videos/5354-6b-shawna-on-adaptation

http://techtv.mit.edu/videos/5348-4c-2

http://projectnml.ning.com