Learning on-Line

59
Primary ICT Conference Thursday 27th March 2008

description

Presentation for Primary School ICT consultants in Lewisham. March 2008

Transcript of Learning on-Line

Page 1: Learning on-Line

Primary ICT ConferenceThursday 27th March

2008

Page 2: Learning on-Line

Learning on-line – from now and into the

future…Dr Julia Davies

University of Sheffield

Page 3: Learning on-Line

New literacies, new practices

This presentation is based on the premise that literacy is changing in a new media world (Kress, 2003; Lankshear and Knobel, 2006).

Page 4: Learning on-Line
Page 5: Learning on-Line
Page 6: Learning on-Line
Page 7: Learning on-Line
Page 8: Learning on-Line
Page 9: Learning on-Line

http://hometownbaghdad.com/

Page 10: Learning on-Line
Page 11: Learning on-Line
Page 12: Learning on-Line
Page 13: Learning on-Line
Page 14: Learning on-Line
Page 15: Learning on-Line

Literacy as:

FunctionalCriticalSocialNew / DigitalMulti-modal

Page 16: Learning on-Line

…. impossible to separate out from text-mediated social practices the bits concerned with reading or writing (or any other sense of literacy) and to treat them independently of all the non-print bits, like values and gestures, context and meaning, action and objects, talk and interaction, tools and spaces. ….. ‘Literacy bits’ do not exist apart from the social practices in which they are embedded and in which they are acquired.

(Lankshear and Knobel, 2006:13)

Page 17: Learning on-Line

New Literacies

»‘more collaborative’, »‘less individuated’, »‘more distributed’ »‘participatory’

(Lankshear and Knobel, 2006)

Page 18: Learning on-Line

The communicational landscapes of today, their relation to current forms of work and to current forms of pleasure, demand a recasting of our thinking about representation in the most far-reaching form. The world, now, is no longer a world in which written language is dominant.

(Kress 1997:5)

Page 19: Learning on-Line
Page 20: Learning on-Line

Flickr.com

Page 21: Learning on-Line

Think of a title for these pictures…. How do image

and words interact?

Page 22: Learning on-Line
Page 23: Learning on-Line
Page 24: Learning on-Line
Page 25: Learning on-Line
Page 26: Learning on-Line

Slideshow

Page 27: Learning on-Line

Bubbleshare link

Page 28: Learning on-Line

Bendy Wendy

Page 29: Learning on-Line

Community – tag = Primary

Page 30: Learning on-Line

Voicethreads

Page 31: Learning on-Line

Lady of the Lake

Page 32: Learning on-Line

News and blogs

Page 33: Learning on-Line

News and blogs

• Many ‘news’ blogs maintained by ‘citizen journalists’ e.g. blog kept by Iraqi civilian Salam Pax, who was eventually invited to write a column for the Guardian on the Iraqi invasion

• Many newspapers now have blogs in addition to printed newspapers and online news

Page 34: Learning on-Line

Blog Link

Page 35: Learning on-Line

Cult of the Amateur

• “Useless and corrupt user generated content”• “Self promotion - narcissism”• “Bloggery …. an enormous threat”

(Andrew Keen: BBC Radio 4. 25.6.07.)

Page 36: Learning on-Line

“Kids are going on the internet and are believing everything they read we are creating an increasingly media illiterate culture … in order to understand the internet you need to be literate before you get to the screen….”

(Andrew Keen: BBC Radio 4. 25.6.07.)

Page 37: Learning on-Line

At present children are in many ways confident of their new online skills. But these should not be overestimated, for children are also aware of many ways in which they are confused, uncertain, or lacking in skills, thus resulting perhaps in a relatively narrow or or problematically risky online experience

Bober and Livingstone 2004: 50UK Children Go Online, Listening to Young People’s

Experiences

Page 38: Learning on-Line

Citizen journalism

…is the act of citizens ‘playing an active role in the process of collecting, reporting, analyzing and disseminating information’

(Bowman and Willis, 2005) ‘Peoplerazzi’ http://www.nowpublic.com/

Page 39: Learning on-Line

Wikis and citizen journalism

Page 40: Learning on-Line

London bombings 7/7

London bombings 7/7

Page 41: Learning on-Line

Useful tools for developing media literacy

• Blogs• Wikis

• Podcasts• Image Sharing

• RSS Feeds (Really Simple Syndication)

Page 42: Learning on-Line

How can Web 2.0 develop media literacy?

• Products and services enable manipulation of and reflection on data.

• Collaboration and participation are key factors – can encourage group critical reflection.

• Fosters agency and creativity of individuals e.g. citizen journalists.

• Easy and free access to web-based software.

Page 43: Learning on-Line

Key question for pupils

What are the advantages and disadvantages of

‘citizen journalism’?

Page 44: Learning on-Line

Guardian news blog

Guardian news blog

Page 45: Learning on-Line

Guardian news

Guardian news

Page 46: Learning on-Line

21 blogs

Page 47: Learning on-Line

Blog link

Page 48: Learning on-Line

YouTube

Page 49: Learning on-Line

Key question for pupils

What do a news blog and newspaper website

do that a printed newspaper doesn’t, and

vice-versa?

Page 50: Learning on-Line

Syndication and news

Page 51: Learning on-Line

Google News

Google News

Page 52: Learning on-Line

Vote for your favourite news story!

Digg

Page 53: Learning on-Line

News and podcasting

Page 54: Learning on-Line

Making the News

Making the News

Page 55: Learning on-Line

Evoca

Evoca

Page 57: Learning on-Line

The digital era has allowed us to cross space and time, engage with people in a far-off time zone as though they were just next door, do business with people around the world, and develop information systems that potentially network us all closer and closer every day. Yet, people don't live in a global world - they are more concerned with the cultures in which they participate.

(Boyd: 2006)

Page 58: Learning on-Line

Conclusion• Web 2.0 products and services have great

potential for work on the media.• Pupils can create blogs, wikis and webpages for

relaying news as well as exploring the way in which news is created and reported across Web 2.0 platforms.

• Web 2.0 is changing the nature of journalism and the newspaper industry – contemporary pupils can be at the forefront of tracing these changes and their implications.

• New literacy practices are needed for new times – educators need to take risks and explore potential.

• Pupils need our guidance in case they are NOT already involved- as well as if they ARE.

Page 59: Learning on-Line

Online MA in New Literacies

Dr Julia Davies University of Sheffield

[email protected]