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Charles Dowling

EBSCOhost: Result List: Media literacy - 0 views

    • Charles Dowling
       
      New media literacy plays an essential role for any citizen to participate fully in the 21st century society. Researchers have documented that literacy has evolved historically from classic literacy (reading-writingunderstanding) to audiovisual literacy to digital literacy or information literacy and recently to new media literacy. New media literacy plays an essential role for any citizen to participate fully in the 21st century society. Researchers have documented that literacy has evolved historically from classic literacy (reading-writingunderstanding) to audiovisual literacy to digital literacy or information literacy and recently to new media literacy.
Maggie Tsai

Composing Spaces » Blog Archive » preparing writers for the future of informa... - 1 views

  • I clicked on it and found a step-by-step guide by Andre ‘Serling’ Segers at ign.com. After reading the Basics, I clicked on Walkthrough, which contains detailed instructions with screen shots for each step of the game. I went to my Diigo toolbar and clicked "bookmark." I entered the following tags: zelda, wii, guide, and video-games. I then printed out the guide to Part 1 and went back to my living room to play. After I completed Part 1 I went back to my computer where I saw that the Diigo widget in my Netvibes ecosystem had a link to the Zelda guide. I clicked on the link, found Part 2, printed it, and continued playing. Here is the complete process, repeated.
  • each of the online tools-each of the Web 2.0 technologies-I used during this process is as much a semiotic domain as Zelda itself. They are filled with, to borrow from Gee’s list, written language, images, equations, symbols, sounds, gestures, graphs, and artifacts. Consider, for example, the upper left section of the Netvibes RSS reader that I use-and asked students to use:
  • ...10 more annotations...
  • how to use them within the context of a particular action: finding, retrieving, storing, and re-accessing a certain bit of information
  • Only recently, with the pervasiveness of social bookmarking software (such as Del.icio.us and Diigo) and the ubiquity of RSS feed readers (such as Google Reader and Netvibes), have technologies been available for all internet users to compose their own dynamic storage spaces in multiple interconnected online locations.
  • These dynamic storage spaces each contain what Jay David Bolter (2001) calls writing spaces-online and in-print areas where texts are written, read, and manipulated. Web 2.0 technologies are replete with multiple writing spaces, each of which has its own properties, assumptions, and functions
  • If we can see these spaces as semiotic domains, then we must also see them as spaces for literacy-a literacy that is a function of the space’s own characteristics.
  • [T]echnological literacy . . . refers not only to what is often called "computer literacy," that is, people’s functional understanding of what computers are and how they are used, or their basic familiarity with the mechanical skills of keyboarding, storing information, and retrieving it. Rather, technological literacy refers to a complex set of socially and culturally situated values, practices, and skills involved in operating linguistically within the context of electronic environments, including reading, writing, and communicating. The term further refers to the linking of technology and literacy at fundamental levels of conception and social practice. In this context, technological literacy refers to social and cultural contexts for discourse and communication, as well as the social and linguistic products and practices of communication and the ways in which electronic communication environments have become essential parts of our cultural understanding of what it means to be literate.
  • I teach a portion of a team-taught course called Introduction to Writing Arts that is now required for all Writing Arts majors. In groups of 20 students rotate through three four-week modules, each of which is taught by a different faculty member. My module is called Technologies and the Future of Writing. Students are asked to consider the relationships among technology, writing, and the construction of electronic spaces through readings in four main topic areas: origins of internet technologies, writing spaces, ownership and identities, and the future of writing.
  • how can we prepare students for the kinds of social and collaborative writing that Web 2.0 and Web 3.0 technologies will demand in the coming years? How can we encourage students to create environments where they will begin to see new online writing spaces as genres with their own conventions, grammars, and linguistics? How can we help students-future writers-understand that the technologies they use are not value neutral, that they exist within a complex, distributed relationship between humans and machines? And how can that new-found understanding become the basis for skills that students will need as they continue their careers and as lifelong learners?
  • so much of writing is pre-writing-research, cataloguing, organizing, note-taking, and so forth-I chose to consider the latter question by introducing students to contemporary communication tools that can enable more robust activities at the pre-writings stage.
  • I wanted students to begin to see how ideas-their ideas-can and do flow between multiple spaces. More importantly, I wanted them to see how the spaces themselves influenced the flow of ideas and the ideas themselves.
  • The four spaces that I chose create a reflexive flow of ideas. For example, from their RSS feed reader they find a web page that is interesting or will be useful to them in some way. They bookmark the page. They blog about it. The ideas in the blog become the basis for a larger discussion in a formal paper, which they store in their server space (which we were using as a kind of portfolio). In the paper they cite the blog where they first learned of the ideas. The bookmarked page dynamically appears in the social bookmark widget in their RSS reader so they can find it again. The cycle continues, feeding ideas, building information, compounding knowledge in praxis.
    Graham Perrin

    Citations - 149 views

    This is an idea using a fictitious example. I use Endnote which has a Personal Communication citation type (I don't see one on Zotero). There is a field erroneously named Title in which I type: Co...

    citations biblio

    aiycsm

    Why AIYCSM-All India Youth Computer Saksharta Mission Is Better Than Others ? - 0 views

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      AIYCSM is one of the leading institution in IT Industry. The main objective behind the establishment of this institute is to spread the computer literacy and vocational program to all over the country. By this literacy program or Saksharta Mission, we ensure that student may learn computer more and become self- motivated. AIYCSM are in tune with the latest trends in the Information Technology Industry, thus setting the highest standards of IT education for the students.
    Maggie Tsai

    TCC08: Wikis and Blogs and Tags: Oh Why? « Experiencing E-Learning - 0 views

    • Social Connection Tools “Increased engagement = Opportunity for Increased Learning” Engagement is the why for these tools Information Literacy & Sharing Discoveries delicious Diigo Twitter Annotations on sites helps information literacy.
    • Collaboration Tools Wikipedia Kaltura–collaborative video editing Google Docs Diigo Create a sharing community Important to teach students collaborative skills to prepare for work Teams are goal-directed
    • Diigo Set up a group Have everyone in the group highlight and add sticky notes to discuss the content Diigo’s dashboard has forums for discussion Automatic notification available so instructors can keep track of discussion Help connect learning in class to learning outside
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    • Diigo = “delicious on steroids” with more annotations or conversations, sticky notes. More social community.
    • “Increased engagement = Opportunity for Increased Learning” Engagement is the why for these tools
    • Annotations on sites helps information literacy.
    Graham Perrin

    City Brights: Howard Rheingold : Twitter Literacy (I refuse to make up a Twittery name... - 4 views

    • A channel to multiple publics
    • more than 60% of new Twitter users fail to return the following month
    • part-technological, part-social communication media
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    • A window on what is happening in multiple worlds
    • knowing how to look
      • Graham Perrin
         
        It's much easier to view microblogging conversations in Identi.ca
    • start my wordflow for the day with something short and lightweight
    • Openness
    • Immediacy
    • Variety
    • Reciprocity
      • Graham Perrin
         
        I'm surprised that Twitter can't present a conversation in a meaningful way. Compare with Identi.ca running StatusNet, examples: http://identi.ca/conversation/12018048 http://identi.ca/conversation/12000057 http://identi.ca/conversation/11701331#notice-11822415
    • Asymmetry
    • A way to meet new people
    • Community-forming
    • I needed an authoritative guide to
      • Graham Perrin
         
        I needed a guide to configuring a microblogging client (twhirl) to work with a StatusNet server. I was pleasantly surprised at how quickly I gained an answer.
    • communities can emerge
    • A platform for mass collaboration
    • Searchability
      • Graham Perrin
         
        Really not as good as it should be.
    • gain value - useful information, answers to questions, new friends and colleagues
    • tuning and feeding
    • some kind of ongoing relationship
    • knowing how to tune the network of people you follow
      • Graham Perrin
         
        I expect to tune my Diigo network over a period of months.
    • how to feed the network of people who follow you
    • IRL ("in real life")
    • some personal element going, but not to overdo it
    • not crank up the self-promotion
    • skills to use productively
    • If it isn't fun, it won't be useful
    • attention literacy
    • ten to twenty minutes to regain full focus when returning to a task that requires concentrated attention
    • Comments
    • ambient awareness
    • http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/07/magazine/07awareness-t.html
    • definitely worth adding to the mix. Thank you, Stephanie
    • Implicit reputation/credibility filters
    • a recovering drop-out
    • connecting on many different planes
    • http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/2009/may/12/computer-science-it
    • back channel conversations during my presentations
    • one of the best explanations of the value and intricacies of twitter
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      "Sure, Twitter is banal and trivial, full of self-promotion and outright spam. So is the Internet. The difference between seeing Twitter as a waste of time or as a powerful new community amplifier depends entirely on how you look at it - on knowing how to look at it."
    Susie Highley

    Home | Civic Online Reasoning - 0 views

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      Free courseware. Recommended by Frank Baker
    Debra Gottsleben

    CBC Books - David Weinberger on the future of libraries#.TviGvt0hecg.email - 9 views

    • The other new feature is that the colour of the book's spine is mapped to the book's popularity. "We give weightings to the various ways in which users can have used the work. So you'll be looking at the shelf and you'll see not only a set of works that are like it in some way...but you also see, by the depth of the colour blue, how relevant that work has been to your community."
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      excellent post on the future of libraries.
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      Bilqis notice the part about the color of the book influencing how popular it is! Thought of you when I read that!
    Maggie Tsai

    EdCompBlog: Social Annotation - 0 views

    • It reminded me of the the review tools in Microsoft Word which I've used a few times with students - someone sends me a Word document and I add comments and suggested edits. The review tools can track changes I make as well as highlighting sections and adding notes in the margin. I can then send the annotated Word document back to the author and a conversation grows around the original document and our comments. When I first started using this feature of Word, I thought it would be great if you could do that with web pages. Imagine being able to get a class of students to collaborate on a web page: to highlighting sections, share their understanding, ask questions and add extra information. With diigo, that's exactly what you could do.Add to that online social bookmarking (which can be linked to other bookmarking services such as del.icio.us), the ability to highlight any text on a page and search for it on a range of search services using a pop-up menu, to blog about a page and link non-diigo users to your annotations on that page (this blog posted was created using the diigo Blog this tool) and a host of other features ...and you have a stunningly valuable educational tool.
    • I have also found Diigo to be quite an exciting tool and this year my year group is in a better position to use it. I structured it into an independent activity during a literacy hour with my Year 5 children. Using Diigo I annotated a set of written instructions with comprehension style questions and the children answered them in their jotters. The children were accessing the site using a class set of laptops. I wanted them to respond someway online but took a simpler step to begin with to test the concept. It worked very well and the children were well motivated and on task - they managed well with the new tool and took it in their stride.
    Graham Perrin

    AASL Releases Best Web Sites for Teaching and Learning - 7/13/2009 2:00:00 PM - School ... - 0 views

    • Diigo
    • AASL Releases Best Web Sites for Teaching and Learning
    • Web sites singled out by the American Association of School Librarians (AASL)
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    • best resources for learning and curriculum development
    • The Best Websites for Teaching and Learning are considered the "best of the best" by AASL
    • innovation, creativity, active participation, and collaboration
    • Animoto; Classroom 2.0; Curriki; Diigo; Edublogs; Good Reads; Mindmeister; Ning; Our Story; Partnership for 21st Century Skills; Polleverywhere; Primary Access; RezED; Second Life; Simply Box; Skype; SOS for Information Literacy; Teacher Tube; VoiceThread; Wikispaces; and Zoho
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