Thursday, November 28, 2013
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Reading and Discussion #14
A quote from the reading:
"The ability to render one's world as changeable and oneself as an agent able to direct that change is integrally linked to acts of self-representation through writing, as Freire taught us long ago, and through other semiotic systems."
This quote adds to the credibility of digital storytelling. It equates the process with the power of the written word and puts one in mind of the origins of storytelling itself. It also shows why more people need to tell stories. In the past, most publicly circulated stories were created by those who had the money or influence to publish them. So only society's most powerful could self-represent. The dominant message was skewed in their favor. Now with digital technology, anyone can self-represent. If enough people do this skillfully, the so-called dominant message will become less dominant, giving balance to public narratives. (Imagine if history could have been written with many more personal stories... Imagine if every American slave had had an equal chance to tell his tale along side of his oppressor... How might we have come to view U.S. history?)
Discussion questions:
1. How does digital storytelling support academic literacies?
Digital storytelling challenges students to view their lives an their worlds in the form of a meaningful narrative. It is not unlike what we do when we write. We remember, we research, and we synthesize it all into something that makes sense to us, and to our audience.
2. Now that you have created your own digital story, do you think that using images, words and music to create a message is simplistic compared to traditional alphabetic print based argumentation?
Not at all. As a theatre teacher and a storyteller myself, I was never in danger of finding the use of images, words, and music simplistic. The great thing about factual images is that they can say things, important things, that you may not have intended to say. Family images often illustrate time period, and representations of relationships and personality that the composers of the script overlook. Look at a documentary by the award-winning director Ken Burns. All he does is provide narration and music to some carefully chosen historical still imagery. And it's amazing.
3. After creating your own digital story, do you see how digital storytelling can help develop a stronger sense of agency in their own lives? Do you think this might have a positive impact on students academic lives? How? Why?
I do. This can give students a strong sense of purpose when representing oneself and life story to a critical audience. Often students fail to feel that sense of purpose about writing because they believe it will be read by an audience of one teacher. Digital story telling has no limit to the size of the audience.
"The ability to render one's world as changeable and oneself as an agent able to direct that change is integrally linked to acts of self-representation through writing, as Freire taught us long ago, and through other semiotic systems."
This quote adds to the credibility of digital storytelling. It equates the process with the power of the written word and puts one in mind of the origins of storytelling itself. It also shows why more people need to tell stories. In the past, most publicly circulated stories were created by those who had the money or influence to publish them. So only society's most powerful could self-represent. The dominant message was skewed in their favor. Now with digital technology, anyone can self-represent. If enough people do this skillfully, the so-called dominant message will become less dominant, giving balance to public narratives. (Imagine if history could have been written with many more personal stories... Imagine if every American slave had had an equal chance to tell his tale along side of his oppressor... How might we have come to view U.S. history?)
Discussion questions:
1. How does digital storytelling support academic literacies?
Digital storytelling challenges students to view their lives an their worlds in the form of a meaningful narrative. It is not unlike what we do when we write. We remember, we research, and we synthesize it all into something that makes sense to us, and to our audience.
2. Now that you have created your own digital story, do you think that using images, words and music to create a message is simplistic compared to traditional alphabetic print based argumentation?
Not at all. As a theatre teacher and a storyteller myself, I was never in danger of finding the use of images, words, and music simplistic. The great thing about factual images is that they can say things, important things, that you may not have intended to say. Family images often illustrate time period, and representations of relationships and personality that the composers of the script overlook. Look at a documentary by the award-winning director Ken Burns. All he does is provide narration and music to some carefully chosen historical still imagery. And it's amazing.
3. After creating your own digital story, do you see how digital storytelling can help develop a stronger sense of agency in their own lives? Do you think this might have a positive impact on students academic lives? How? Why?
I do. This can give students a strong sense of purpose when representing oneself and life story to a critical audience. Often students fail to feel that sense of purpose about writing because they believe it will be read by an audience of one teacher. Digital story telling has no limit to the size of the audience.
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Reading and Discussion #13
Quote from Chapter 7, “Beyond Technology Skills”:
“There is both subtle and overt pressure to focus on teaching technologies as tools, without incorporating an understanding of their uses within the participatory culture, and without integrating technology instruction fully into the pre-service curriculum in ways that result in critical analysis of content or alignment with pedagogy” (Avila & Pandaya, 2013).
This quote sums up how old ideas about technology are perpetuated in the classroom still. I feel that this was my attitude up until recently. Those of us who remember what life was like before the internet and the culture it has shaped, are sometimes tempted to lean toward the perspective that technology is superfluous. However, I can now see how communication technologies have shaped the culture, and vice versa. It’s hard to imagine 21st century American culture without cellphones, internet, etc. So it is no longer an option to consider technology a tool that we can train students in, as if it’s something they can take or leave. I would liken the entire thing to how the automobile shaped the country. This first generation to see cars thought they were a danger and a nuisance, and many campaigned to have them banned within city limits of many towns. Within a generation or two, cars were a huge part of daily life, and they began to reshaped neighborhoods and cities, and greatly affect the commerce between them. Who can imagine our lives without them now? They are a part of all we do, and we must give a little time each day to recognize the ethical concerns of using them safely and wisely. In a lot of ways, this is what the advent of the internet has done to the developed world in the past 20 years. This really calls for a realignment of attitudes toward technology to match those expressed in this chapter.
Chapter 7 Discussion Questions:
1. Why do the authors of this chapter chose to use the term "critical digital literacies" rather than just "digital literacies"?
The authors use this term to step away from the “variety of concepts” already represented by the term “digital literacies” and to express a more specific definition that includes “sociocultural perspectives that acknowledge the generative interplay between literacy and the contexts in which literacy occurs” (Avila & Pandaya, 2013).
2. How well did our own teacher education program prepare you to use technology in your teaching practices? Was it more tools based or literacy based?
I received my BA in Education in 2007, and at that time I think many of the classes I taken held the view of technology as tools. However, since I began taking graduate classes in 2011, I feel that many of the courses have been literacy based. Perhaps the program has changed over the past five or six years to include a literacy based approach.
3. What should teachers be thinking about when they engage in critical thinking as it relates to technology use in school?
Teachers should be thinking not that students are “digital natives” but “natives of consumer culture.” We have never known a time without a dominant message that says, “you can fix anything with a purchase.” We are used to being marketed to, and influenced by feelings of inadequacy. That said, teachers should also be thinking, “I should introduce students to ways to question this take-for-granted reality.”
4. On page 149, it is stated that students have certain rights with respect to "critical digital literacies." Do students in your teaching context have these rights? Give an example or non-example of at least one of these rights.
I feel convicted to provide these rights. Recently, I have worked to secure all but one: “The right to explore or experiment with one’s own digital space” (Avila & Pandaya, 2013) has been difficult to secure at public school. This is a right that no teacher can safeguard without the permission of parents and of the county and state school boards. Unfortunately, most of the technology that can help students to do this is blocked out of fear that such exploration and experimentation will bring harm to children or lawsuits to school systems.
Reference
Ávila, J. (2013). Critical digital literacies as social praxis: Intersections and challenges. New York: Peter Lang.
Sunday, November 10, 2013
Digital Storyboard
Point of View: The story will be told from my point of view as a 36 year old, looking back on a experience that happened when I was 8 or 9. I can see how the experience “awakened” several things that became a big part of my interests and personality over the years.
Dramatic Question: “When I was nine-years old, my grandfather taught me a secret word. A magic word.”
Emotional Content. I would call the predominant emotion in this “awakening.” You can’t “find yourself” at the age of nine, but if you look back you might see the beginning of who you came to be. Another emotion in the story is “connection.” On this trip with my father and grandfather to see my grandfather’s homeland, and to see the funeral of his mother, I felt like I was in the inner sanctum of family history and lore. The “secret word” in the story is part of a ridiculous country folktale… a complicated nursery rhyme… But for me, I had felt like he had given me the access to a hidden treasure.
Voice: I will narrate this story. I don’t think anyone else could, given the personal nature of the story. Chances are I will read from a prewritten script, but I should have no problem making my own words sound fresh at the time of recording.
Soundtrack: I may use stock music from the Youtube library, or I may use some bebop jazz. Already, I am leaning toward “Moanin” by Charles Mingus. Why not country (since we are driving from WV to AR)? Some American country music may fit the setting, by I consider jazz the most American of American art forms, and “bop” was the music of the beat generation travelers whose writings have helped me frame these memories in my mind.
Economy: I will keep the script as short as possible. Although I have a lot to say, I will try to let the pictures and music tell the story.
Pacing: I think pacing is the second biggest element in the performance of any story. Plot is first.
Reading and Discussion #12
RESPONSE TO CHAPTER SIX:
1. How did the Ask Anansi game support critical literacies?
By making students “indigenous anthropologists” (Avila & Pandaya, 2013) students were challenged to look at their community South Los Angeles (“South Central”) as both insiders and outsiders. Students were challenged to ask questions about their community and select important issues facing their environment. This helped provide some input into the creation of the game, and determined the themes the game would cause them to investigate. This asking questions and evaluating one’s own culture and community supports critical literacies.
2. How did the Ask Anansi game support academic literacies?
Three things in the game supported academic literacies: First the log the students kept while figuring out the solutions to the clues caused them to keep a record of the deductive reasoning they were doing. Second, the role play itself caused them to engage in real conversations with people in their school and community which helps “civic development” (Avila & Pandaya, 2013) by turning concepts in to actions. Third, the frame narrative of the game was that the students had to somehow satisfy Anansi’s “insatiable need” for a “good story” (Avila & Pandaya, 2013), and this potentially helped students to view the project as a narrative.
3. How did the Ask Anansi game support digital literacies?
Students used mobile phones, and iPods to communicate with the teacher, decipher clues, and log solving the clues. Students also used the internet to do research when necessary to help make it through the various challenges of the game. As the author points out, the way technology helped students use participate in the use of media without “overly relying on complicated digital tools” (Avila & Pandaya, 2013). This integrated use of technology supported digital literacies.
4. What is meant by the term "reading the word and reading the world and writing the world"? Give an example from the chapter.
In the activity, students took what they read, and were made to apply it to the world by asking questions and evaluating their community as a group. As “the class began enacting critical digital literacies practices in both online and physical environments” they were challenged to “build their own meaning and critique of the inequities within their lives” (Avila & Pandaya, 2013). This activity then empowered the students to become active, rather than passive, citizens… thus equipping people who will write the world.
A QUOTE I LIKE FROM THE TEXT:
“Though students regularly engaged in mobile throughout this project… it was never the central pedagogical spotlight of this work. Ultimately, the research that the students and I conducted yielded critical practice that decentered learning from the traditional classroom; it located engagement in the spaces that students explored critically and instilled literacies instruction within experiential community knowledge” (Avila & Pandaya, 2013).
This passage provides an example of how digital media finds itself naturally integrated into a unit that causes students to learn about the world, and issues affecting their community. The mobile phones and iPods were only a way to empower and enrich the experience. They were not the experience itself. In this context, the use of technology seemed to serve as a model for the ideological perspective of literacy.
References
Ávila, J. (2013). Critical digital literacies as social praxis: Intersections and challenges. New York: Peter Lang.
Sunday, November 3, 2013
Reading and Discussion #11
Reading
Discussion
This quote from the reading stood out to me: “…Much of their media
usage is characterized by consumption rather than production, such as watching
movies on the PC or the television, playing computer games, listening to music,
and reading magazines” (Avila & Pandya, 2013).
In this discussion about the “myth of the digitally innovative
teenager,” Avila and Pandya (2013) begin by explaining that many of the today’s
youth do not create media products of their own after school, but engage in
activities similar to those of the previous generation. At first, this struck me as possibly a good
thing. An advocate of the outdoors and “old
fashioned” social interaction sometimes my feelings toward digital culture is
negative. I thought, “Wait a
minute. Kids are not going home and
blogging or maintaining a Tumblr account?
That’s great. Maybe our online
lives have grown too cumbersome. Maybe
it’s time to take our digital involvement and walk it back a little.” But when I came across quote above, I
suddenly remembered that young people, digitally inclined or not, now live in a
world where power comes from understanding how to work and produce online. Watch a video on Bitcoin for just another
example of how being digitally innovative can make this happen. So if we decide to join our young people in
returning to more of a consumer than a producer, we may just be taking away
their ability to be empowered in a global culture that growing in this digital
direction.
Response
Questions
1. What is the difference
between an "essentialist" "traditionalist" or
"autonomous" "perspective of technology and literacy and a New
Literacy Studies or "ideological" perspective on technology and
literacy? Which perspective do you adhere to? Why?
The "essentialist" perspective seems to have little to do with the teacher learner, and everything to do with how the technology itself can improve teaching and learning. In this perspective, Powerpoint and Prezi might be looked at as ways to facilitate (or "boost") traditional lectures. Those with this perspective choose to view new technology as a either positive or negative supplement to old ways.
The "autonomous" perspective focuses on the person and sees literacy as something a teacher or student has as a skill. This probably assumes that once a person has some level of critical thinking skills she can apply it throughout several areas of life.
The "ideological" perspective sees literacies as a factor in an ideology, and that those literacies are part of a web social and cultural factors.
As for myself, I seem to be stuck in the autonomous perspective right now. I have moved well beyond the traditional views of media technology, and have been teaching from the view that literacy is something a person has or can attain and use as a skill. The ideological model is too new to me, and I have to learn more before I can understand how that really can be true. (It may be true, but I am pleading temporary ignorance.)
2. Give three concrete examples of how the teacher in the chapter supported "new literacy" or "critical digital literacies" practices with blogging.
First, Anne the teacher, did not just use media to supplement a traditional method. She actually connected blogging to all of her Print & Photo class activities. This took media literacy out of the traditional realm, and made it a part of class, school, and community culture. Because of this, the measure of student literacy became more complex than whether they could apply certain thinking skills.
Second, Anne made students take personal ownership for the excellence in the photo blog. No student wanted to be the one to publish substandard work. This counts as a social and cultural context for media production. The class contained a teacher-inspired (deadline driven) value for quality work. Therefore, literacy was a part of this web of conditions.
Third, Anne allowed students to develop a digital publishing culture of their own. Students viewed on another's work (photos, etc.) and were able to share criticism and motivation. This may not be something the teacher did exactly, but her style of leadership permitted it.
The "essentialist" perspective seems to have little to do with the teacher learner, and everything to do with how the technology itself can improve teaching and learning. In this perspective, Powerpoint and Prezi might be looked at as ways to facilitate (or "boost") traditional lectures. Those with this perspective choose to view new technology as a either positive or negative supplement to old ways.
The "autonomous" perspective focuses on the person and sees literacy as something a teacher or student has as a skill. This probably assumes that once a person has some level of critical thinking skills she can apply it throughout several areas of life.
The "ideological" perspective sees literacies as a factor in an ideology, and that those literacies are part of a web social and cultural factors.
As for myself, I seem to be stuck in the autonomous perspective right now. I have moved well beyond the traditional views of media technology, and have been teaching from the view that literacy is something a person has or can attain and use as a skill. The ideological model is too new to me, and I have to learn more before I can understand how that really can be true. (It may be true, but I am pleading temporary ignorance.)
2. Give three concrete examples of how the teacher in the chapter supported "new literacy" or "critical digital literacies" practices with blogging.
First, Anne the teacher, did not just use media to supplement a traditional method. She actually connected blogging to all of her Print & Photo class activities. This took media literacy out of the traditional realm, and made it a part of class, school, and community culture. Because of this, the measure of student literacy became more complex than whether they could apply certain thinking skills.
Second, Anne made students take personal ownership for the excellence in the photo blog. No student wanted to be the one to publish substandard work. This counts as a social and cultural context for media production. The class contained a teacher-inspired (deadline driven) value for quality work. Therefore, literacy was a part of this web of conditions.
Third, Anne allowed students to develop a digital publishing culture of their own. Students viewed on another's work (photos, etc.) and were able to share criticism and motivation. This may not be something the teacher did exactly, but her style of leadership permitted it.
Reference
Ávila, J. (2013). Critical
digital literacies as social praxis: Intersections and challenges. New York: Peter Lang.
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