Quote
“These new literacy practices are
inherent in the Web 2.0 landscape that is familiar to many of the Net Generation,
but not yet embedded in school literacy practices” (Asselin &
Moayeri, 2011).
I
chose this quote because I don’t believe this is the fault of classroom
teachers. Until we can afford one-to-one computing, as well as an IT personnel,
it is impossible to embed Web 2.0 technologies into school literacy practices.
I feel that more teachers would love to incorporate games and technological
instruction if they had the finances and means to do so. I would love to do
more digitally-interactive lessons; however, it is difficult to schedule lab
and find enough working computers for my students. Eventually, I believe we
will have one-to-one computing.
Asselin, M. & Moayeri, M. (2011). Practical
Strategies: The Participatory Classroom: Web 2.0 in the Classroom. Literacy
Learning: The Middle Years 19(2).
Resource
This picture and its website lists Web 2.0 tools and their hyperlinks. I think that this is important because teachers need to see all the resources available for integrating such technology tools in their classroom. I like the picture because it displays how much digital tools have overtaken in today's society. This picture is a mosaic of almost all of the Web 2.0 tools available.
Questions
What makes a literacy practice a “new
literacy”?
Literacy
practices that are “new literacy” are classroom practices that draw on social
elements of Web 2.0 that are favored by youth to support less practiced usages
required for learning.
How does might Citizen Journalism
support the development of “new literacies”?
Citizen
Journalism supports the development of “new literacies” because it is drawing
on relevant issues relating to the students. This motivates students to learn
while using Web 2.0 technologies. This project is better than writing a news
article or a report. It’s interactive learning.
What is critical literacy and how does
your Citizen Journalism project encourage critical literacy? How might you
change your project to encourage critical literacy?
Critical
literacy is the deconstruction of text by understanding the foundation and
conflicts that lie beneath the surface content and the relationship that the
text holds with other text(s). Citizen Journalism project encourages critical
literacy because it views the information through various perspectives, such as
political social, and economical lenses. Specifically, students research and
interview expert or experienced witnesses. This promotes critical literacy. A
way to better enhance the critical literacy in the Citizen Journalism project
is to encourage students to find contradicting opinions on the topic.
What problems may arise when students
use Web 2.0 tools for learning in school and how might teachers capitalize on
these opportunities to promote information literacy?
A
problem that may arise when students use Web 2.0 tools for learning in school
is that teachers may become dependent on these tools for learning. Moreover,
the problem of ownership could occur with work when students collaborate
through the Internet, such as with Wiki contributions. Social networking could
become a distraction from the classroom. Teachers can capitalize on these
opportunities to promote information literacy by sharing how trustworthiness
and biases can be found in resources available on the web. Also, appropriate
usage of the tools can be taught to students as it comes up. This will be a
learning opportunity to help students become critical consumers of information.
I absolutely agree with your comment that the teachers are not a fault, however, who gets blamed first, where do budget cuts go first? Not all schools are crated equal with funding. It's sad. I love your Prezi.
ReplyDeleteI agree with the quote that you chose and I agree with the reason for you choosing the quote.
ReplyDeleteGreat image! Did not realize there were that many tools out there.
ReplyDelete