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August 29th, 2009

Is technology reviving literacy?

Posted by sarah on August 29th, 2009

I’m pretty excited about this. Clive Thompson writes in Wired Magazine 17.09 about Andrea Lunsford, professor of writing and rhetoric at Stanford University, and the Standford Study of Writing.

“[Lunsford] has organized a mammoth project called the Stanford Study of Writing to scrutinize college students’ prose. From 2001 to 2006, she collected 14,672 student writing samples — everything from in-class assignments, formal essays, and journal entries to emails, blog posts, and chat sessions. Her conclusions are stirring.

“‘I think we’re in the midst of a literacy revolution the likes of which we haven’t seen since Greek civilization,’ she says. For Lunsford, technology isn’t killing out ability to write. It’s reviving it – and pushing our literacy in bold new directions.’

“The first thing she found is that young people today write far more than any generation before them. That’s because so much socializing takes place online, and it almost always involves text. Of all the writing that the Stanford students did, a stunning 38 percent of it took place out of the classroom—life writing, as Lunsford calls it. …

“We think of writing as either good or bad. What today’s young people know is that knowing who you’re writing for and why you’re writing might be the most crucial factor of all.”

Tags: literacy
Posted in: Curriculum, e-Learning
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March 4th, 2009

What do we mean by literacy?

Posted by sarah on March 4th, 2009

We had a great time with the e-fellows last week when they came to Wellington to kick off their fellowship projects. First, we met the Minister of Education, Hon Anne Tolley, and snapped a photo. (In the photo: Esme Sutherland, Sue Smith, Marilyn Small, Minister Tolley, Claire Amos, Helen Rennie-Younger, Tia Fraser, Virginia Mitchell, Robyn Hurliman, Marion Lumley, absent: Deidre Senior.)

Because the theme of the e-fellows’ projects this year is literacy, on the agenda was a discussion about what we mean by literacy. Sue McDowall from NZCER framed our thinking. Definitions of literacy are highly contested, and Sue’s list of ‘literacy is/is not’ is a useful starter for discussion:

  • Literacy is the way we communicate in different contexts or discourses (it is more than standard English).
  • Literacy is using the language and knowing the values of the communities we belong to (it is more than the ability to know how to do something).
  • Literacy is situated and multiple (it is not generic and singular).
  • Literacy is constantly evolving (it is not fixed and there is no end point).
  • Literacy is multimodal (it is more than print and word based).

The discussion with the e-fellows highlighted for me that while we want our young people to be proficient in the language of ‘success’ and of schooling (reading and writing in standard english), this is not the only literacy, it is constructed and value laden, and other literacy practices (social, cultural, ethical, digital, networked …) are equally as important for our young people.

more »

Tags: diversity, e-fellows, literacy, media, multiliteracies
Posted in: Sarah's top ten, multiliteracies
4 Comments
 
November 3rd, 2008

e-Fellows for 2009 announced

Posted by sarah on November 3rd, 2008

Today, the Ministry of Education announced 10 e-Learning Teacher Fellowships for 2009.

The 2009 e-fellows will explore an aspect of their e-learning practice in literacy by conducting a short but in-depth classroom-based inquiry project. They will share their findings with the teaching community. Next years’ e-Fellows are:

  • Claire Amos, Auckland Girls’ Grammar School: Increasing engagement and achievement in formal writing through collaborating using wikis
  • Tia Fraser, Hira School, Nelson: Promoting deeper understanding through reflecting on video recordings of students’ dramatisations of a story text
  • Robyn Hurliman, Owhata School, Rotorua: Collaborative storytelling through translating the concept of literacy circles into blogging
  • Marion Lumley, Otaki College, Waikanae: Explanation writing through blogging with online mentors
  • Virginia Mitchell, Pekerau School, Ohaupo: Retelling stories using Voicethread and other web2.0 tools and sharing them with an audience
  • Helen Rennie-Younger, Sunnybrae Normal School, Auckland: Transferring students’ oral stories into multimedia presentations and sharing with an audience via the classroom blog
  • Deidre Senior, Oamaru Intermediate: More able readers support less able readers through blogging about texts to enhance comprehension
  • Marilyn Small, Manaia View School, Whangarei: Investigating the impact of an authentic audience on students’ engagement through producing content for a regional TV station
  • Sue Smith, Whangaparaoa College, Auckland: Using the interactive game Myst to engage reluctant writers in creative writing
  • Esmay Sutherland, Pine Hill School, Dunedin: Fostering students as authors by using animation to retell movie narratives

more »

Tags: e-fellows, literacy, research, teaching as inquiry
Posted in: research
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August 14th, 2008

Applications open for e-fellows

Posted by sarah on August 14th, 2008

Applications for the Ministry of Education’s e-Learning Teacher Fellowship for 2009 are now open. Up to 10 classroom teachers and early childhood educators using e-learning in innovative ways will be selected for the fellowship. 

Successful applicants, supported through the fellowship, will explore an aspect of their e-learning practice and share their findings with the teacher community. The theme for e-fellows’ projects in 2009 is literacy.

more »

Tags: e-fellows, literacy, research, teaching as inquiry
Posted in: research
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