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Nigel Robertson

Network Literacy Mini-Course | Howard Rheingold - 1 views

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    Understanding how networks work is an essential 21st century literacy.
Tracey Morgan

JISC Digital Literacies programme: Mozilla and web... - Eventbrite - 0 views

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    "Digital literacy is not word processing or watching movies on an iPhone, but instead using technology to create, code and collaborate. In today's world, that necessarily includes the Web. Building a generation of young 'webmakers' is key to job creation, international competitiveness and engagement in civil society. In this webinar, Mozilla will talk about their work in this area to define key Web literacy skills, create pathways for innovative learning experiences around them and build a network of instructors and facilitators with a shared mission."
Nigel Robertson

Universities must rethink their approach to student digital literacy | Higher Education... - 2 views

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    Framing Digital Literacy as conversation. Not stunning but worth adding to the lists.
Nigel Robertson

Networked Learning as Experiential Learning | EDUCAUSE - 0 views

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    Gardner Campbell on the power of networked learning and notes that digital literacy is becoming impoverished.
Tracey Morgan

Visual Complexity: Mapping Patterns for the Information Age | Brain Pickings - 0 views

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    "Data visualization is a running theme of visual literacy here, and Manuel Lima has been one of its biggest advocates since 2005 when, shortly after graduating from the Parson School of Design, he launched VisualComplexity - an ambitious portal for the visualization of complex networks across a multitude of disciplines, from biology to history to the social web."
Stephen Bright

Using the web for learning and teaching - a new understanding | Higher Education Networ... - 0 views

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    Using the web for learning & teaching - @daveowhite's new understanding http://t.co/WEuEjNcc #digitalliteracy #highered (via @enactivist)
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    Genre's of participation - were we moving towards this with our survey descriptors?
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    'visitors' and 'residents' paradigm for ways of interacting on the web - unlike digital natives paradigm does not imply any age-related differences
Nigel Robertson

New Media Literacies - 0 views

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    "Our Space is a set of curricular materials designed to encourage high school students to reflect on the ethical dimensions of their participation in new media environments. Through role-playing activities and reflective exercises, students are asked to consider the ethical responsibilities of other people, and whether and how they behave ethically themselves online. These issues are raised in relation to five core themes that are highly relevant online: identity, privacy, authorship and ownership, credibility, and participation. For more information, download the Introduction to Our Space [pdf], FAQ [pdf], and Road Map [pdf]. All curricular units and lessons are free and available for download below. The full casebook [pdf - 133MB] can be downloaded using the link at the bottom of the page." Critiqued by @downes for not addressing the issue properly "This is "a set of curricular materials designed to encourage high school students to reflect on the ethical dimensions of their participation in new media environments." The content divides into five major subject areas: participation, identity, privacy, credibility, and authorship and ownership. I'm not sure these are the top five things I would list when thinking of ethical dimensions of new media environments. While it's useful that there is a section on flamers, lurkers and mentors I think there should be something about hate, racism and bulling. And while a section on credibility is a good idea, it should be based on the principles of reason and inference, not outrageously bad definitions like this: "Networking-the ability to search for, synthesize, and disseminate information." And this: "Collective intelligence-evidence that participants in knowledge communities pool knowledge and compare notes with others toward a common goal." Wow, those are just wrong. Maybe I need to review this and criticize it more closely."
Nigel Robertson

Why open access isn't enough in itself | Higher Education Network | Guardian Professional - 0 views

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    Account of difficulty with Open Access and misunderstanding / misreporting. Not an argument to stop OA but a plea to make the OA change now mean something to readers.
Tracey Morgan

Transliteracy: Crossing divides by Sue Thomas et al - 1 views

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    This article defines transliteracy as "the ability to read, write and interact across a range of platforms, tools and media from signing and orality through handwriting, print, TV, radio and film, to digital social networks" and opens the debate with examples from history, orality, philosophy, literature, and ethnography.
Stephen Harlow

Science of the Invisible: Students participation in assessed social network activity - ... - 1 views

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    "Our first year Biological Sciences students have just completed their key skills course. This consists of two modules, one delivered in Term 1 (scientific literature databases, Google Reader & RSS, intellectual property, Google Docs collaborative writing,..."
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