Title: 23102009 Slide 1
1Learning Literacies for a Digital Age
- ELESIG symposiumLongbridge Technology Park20
November 2008 - Helen BeethamBecka Currant
2About the LLiDA project
Helen Beetham Lou McGill Allison
Littlejohn Small-scale JISC study Reporting in
Jan 09 (ish)
3Our questions and methods
- 1. What practices underpin effective learning in
the digital age? (a) conceptual and competency
frameworks relevant to learning literacies in UK
HE and FE - (b) The changing landscape of learning
literacies - 2. How are learning literacies currently being
supported in UK HE and FE institutions?(a)
Institutional audits - (b) Best practice exemplars
- 3. What is the evidence of successful outcomes
for learners from different types of learning
literacy provision?
4What do we mean by digital literacies?
5Activity 1
- In pairs
- Talk, write, draw, map, sing, act or dance your
definition of digital literacies to each other - Write down some of component skills, literacies,
competences, capabilities, practices etc you
would include under your definition of digital
literacies - Please be prepared to give these up as we will be
making shameless use of your ideas!
6Feedback
this leaves us with some tensions.
7Instrumental (technical/economic) definition
Make your training investment go furtheronly
invest in the skills your workforce needs!
8Socially situated definition
socially situated practices
interpreting understanding manipulating analysing
creating sharing learning (how to)
what kind of society?
social value
- information
- representation
- media
- knowledge
Criticality Awareness Agency Value Purpose
9digital tools are changing really fast!
10literacy learning stays much the same!
11literacy as entitlement
- a foundational knowledge or capability, such as
reading, writing or numeracy, on which more
specific skills depend - a cultural entitlement a practice without which
a learner is impoverished in relation to
culturally valued knowledge
12literacy as difference
- communication expressing how an individual
relates to culturally significant communications
in a variety of media - the need for practice acquired through
continued development and refinement in different
contexts, rather than once-and-for-all mastery - a socially and culturally situated practice
often highly dependent on the context in which it
is carried out - self-transformation - literacies (and their lack)
have a lifelong, lifewide impact
13LLiDAs starting point
- By digital literacies we mean the range of
practices that underpin effective learning in a
digital age - We use the term effective learning as
characteristic of skilled, digitally aware
learners with the capacity to participate in
learning using technologies of their own
choosing. - We use the term digital age as a shorthand for
technical, social, economic, cultural and
educational contexts in which digital forms of
information and communication predominate
14LLiDA literacy resources
15literacies
information and media literacies
ICT literacies
critical thinking problem solving reflection acade
mic writing note-taking concept mapping time
management analysis, synthesis evaluation creativi
ty, innovation self-directed learning collaborativ
e learning
searching and retrieving question
framing critical evaluation managing
resources navigating info spaces content
creation editing, repurposing enriching
resources referencing sharing content
ICT skills web skills social networking using
CMC using TELE using digital devices word
processing using databases analysis
tools assistive tech personalisation
16identifying and critiquing competence frameworks
17Auditing institutional provision
18Developing the audit
- Mainly descriptive/qualitative data that does
justice to the complexity of the phenomena - But quantitative data has rhetorical value,
particularly scoping the need for further
development - Tools should support institutional change
processes as well as data collection
19Activity 2
- In pairs, choose one section of the audit
- Interview each other about how this looks at your
respective institutions - How revealing is this exercise? What data
collection and analysis issues do you foresee?
20Snapshots of best practice
21- Looking under the institutional radar and behind
the institutional stories - Excellent practice, not standardised provision
- Excellent institutional policies and policy
frameworks - Excellent central services provision e.g.
library, learning development, e-learning, ICT
support - Excellent provision embedded into curricula
- a. specialist modules
- b. embedded skills
- Excellent learner-led provision, e.g. formal
and informal mentoring, buddying, sharing of
strategies, learner representation
22Activity 3
- Consider examples of excellent practice known to
you, especially types 3 and 4 - Could any of them become one of our snapshots?
- Individually, try filling in a submission (you
could get 100!)
23Discussion over to you
24- Why research digital literacies?
- What research issues does our project raise
(including methods)? - What outputs would actually be useful?
25- http//www.academy.gcal.ac.uk/llida/
26Challenges to this paradigm capacity
- I think our teachers have IT lessons, I think
maybe once a year - The teachers dont know how to use them their
understanding of computers is behind ours - Students experiences in commercial contexts
led them to see the university VLE as
unimaginative and the tutors use of it as
lacking in vision. SEEL project, Greenwich
Learners are developing and practicing these
outside of formal learning contexts
Attention Creativity Social participation
Developing and projecting identities
27- Many of todays learners use technology primarily
for social networking. - Learners often find asynchronous discussion
forums (such as those within VLEs) problematic,
and they are used less frequently and
enthusiastically than other forms of
communication. Learners suggest this is due to
the lower frequency and promptness of
contributions compared with other technologies
learners use to support their own social
networking. - The studies found that learners share work with
each other at previously unsuspected levels.
Informal learning, facilitated by technology, is
also commonplace. (From LXP report)
28Challenges to this paradigm cultures
- GoogleGen knowledge culture
- Style- and usage-based
- Justification-in-use
- Issue-based methods and explanations
- Peer review (open community)
- Rapid response to change
- Pro-sumer cultures (cut-and-paste, re-edit,
repurpose) - Personal identity, reflection
- Circulation, connection
- Academic knowledge culture
- Evidence-based
- Historical justification
- Discipline-based methods and explanations
- Peer review (closed community)
- Evolutionary development (paradigm shifts every
10 yrs?) - Culture of production
- Objectivity, critique
- Publication, reputation
29Some counter-evidence
- While the students expect to be able to set
themselves up, technologically they will not
expect the technology to encroach on what they
see as the key benefits from university
interaction and learning. - I prefer to learn face to face with a teacher
helping me understand any problems that I have. - Traditional teacher/pupil learning methods are
preferred as the backbone for everyday learning.
Technology needs to be used as a tool to
complement this way of learning. - (JISC Student Expectations study, November 2007)
- Consultations carried out with children, parents
and other citizen juries to determine preferred
scenarios for education in 2025 and beyond
(Beyond Current Horizons) find a strong
preference for relationships with teachers to
remain at the heart of the learning experience.
(FutureLab, verbal report, February 2008)
30An alternative paradigm
- Universities and colleges rethink themselves as
communities in which learners skills are valued
and recognised - Learners receive credit for developing their own
and other peoples skills this is an explicit
part of the contract between learners and the
institution - Universities and colleges focus on what learners
value in higher learning, recognising that this
is different from what they value in other social
and cultural spaces. - Technology is used to support core academic
values and practices such as problem solving,
creativity, critique depth of attention,
scholarly collaboration and research. These uses
of technology form the core of institutions ICT
offering to learners.
31Common to both paradigms
- Institutions and their staff understand what
work and community participation entail in the
digital age, and prepare learners to be active
participants in those spheres - The focus is on embedding skills for a digital
age into all curricula.
32Some alternative research questions
- What do learners value of the experience they
get through formal higher/further education? - How can technologies support those values and
empower individuals and institutions to uphold
them? - When do learners experience themselves as being
effective agents in this environment, and what
role can/does technology play? - What alternative futures are we bringing about
(as well as preparing learners for) in our
approach to developing digital literacies?