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ReThinking Competency through Media

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Title: ReThinking Competency through Media


1
Re-Thinking Competency through Media
  • Norm Friesen, PhD
  • Umea, Sept. 18, 2009

2
Overview
  • Summary of conventional understandings of media
    in education and instructional design
  • Media and knowledge the mediatic turn
  • How media shape education
  • Media, education and socialization
  • Conclusion Mediatic turn and competencies

3
Media in Education
  • Educational/Instructional Media the intentional
    and systematic use of computer, broadcast, and
    other technologies for instructional purposes,
    generally in instructional settings. A means to
    acquire competencies.
  • Media Literacy providing students with the
    competency to read or be literate in use and
    consumption of media. (broadcast model)

4
Instructional (multi)Media
  • focusingon how people learn from words and
    pictures in computer-based environments. These
    environments include online instructional
    presentations, interactive lessons, e-courses,
    simulation games, virtual reality and
    computer-supported in-class presentations. (Mayer
    2005, p. ix)

5
Media Literacy
  • The process of understanding and using the mass
    media in an assertive and nonpassive way. This
    includes an informed and critical understanding
    of the nature of the media, the techniques used
    by them and the impact of these techniques.
    (Boles 2008)
  • The competencies of an individual in (isolated)
    encounters with specific media

6
student academic learning model Michael
Molenda 2005
7
The mediatic turn
  • Via empirical evidence "Whatever we know about
    our society, or indeed about the world in which
    we live, we know through media" (Luhmann, 2000)
  • As a way of viewing the world
  • Engineer looks at problem spaces for
    formalization (systems)
  • Psychologist looks for motivation from personal
    history (sexuality)
  • Media as a category vocabulary to view the
    world

8
Media as Epistemological
  • Media have taken on epistemological role they
    are a part of the way that we know about things,
    about ourselves, and about knowledge and
    competency themselves
  • They dont simply have an impact on knowledge,
    they are the way we know, how we identify,
    evaluate, circulate knowledge
  • We are our media

9
E.g. the Epistemology of Print
  • The mastery of the alphabet and then mastery of
    all the skills and knowledge that were arranged
    to follow constituted not merely a curriculum but
    a definition of child development. By creating a
    concept of a hierarchy of knowledge and skills,
    adults invented the structure of child
    development And since the school curriculum was
    entirely designed to accommodate the demands of
    literacy, it is astonishing that educationists
    have not widely commented on the relationship
    between the nature of childhood and the biases
    of print.

10
Epistemology of Print, cont
  • For example, a child evolves towards adulthood by
    acquiring the sort of intellect we expect of a
    good reader a vigorous sense of individuality,
    the capacity to think logically and
    sequentiallyas well as the capacity to
    manipulate high orders of abstraction Infancy
    ended at the point at which a command of speech
    was achieved. Childhood began with the task of
    learning how to readchildhood became a
    description of a level of symbolic achievement.

11
Print sets the Agenda
  • Competencies required of students in school are
    those of print
  • Orderly conduct in a structured environment
  • Environment structured in a linear and logical
    way
  • Reading requires discrete levels of competency
    (reading at a grade 3 level a grade 1 level
    book)
  • Learn from a distinct curriculum, deliberately
    designed learning by doing is removed from the
    classroom

12
Print and Curriculum
  • the groundrules through which reality is
    constructed for children are not simply
    transformed instead, a whole new system of rules
    emerges. The culture is no longer presented to
    the child in its entirety, but only in part
    namely, via a kind of pedagogical rehearsal or
    practise, as it would be for someone from a
    foreign land. This makes certain institutions
    necessary such as schools orphanages and
    kindergartens. (p. 50)

13
Result Socialization vs. Education
  • Education formal process, institutional
    structures, intentionally done, planned through
    curricula, shaped very deliberately
  • Socialization development of selfhood and
    identity through the social and material
    environment
  • is about getting along with and communicating
    with others
  • is clearly social

14
New Media and Competencies
  • De-value the structures of print-based literacy,
    including
  • Classroom structures, customs and forms
  • Competency definitions, and ways competency is
    measured
  • Blur the boundary between formal and informal
    competencies (education and socialization)
  • Involve learning in different ways socialization
    versus instruction
  • Competencies acquired and measured informally

15
Print and Schooling
  • Print competencies are not learned through
    socialization, but through deliberate and
    structured schooling
  • The classroom and the school, as one example, are
    said to be inventions of the printing press,
    and are said to stand or fall on the issue of
    how much importance the printed word will have in
    the future. (Postman)

16
Mediatic Turn and Competencies
  • Competencies and schooling will continue to be
    defined in terms of the epistemology of print
  • New Media are not new in terms of offering an
    alternative to schooling
  • Learning by being shown remains important, and
    continues via the Web as it did via TV
  • For competencies, blur any line between
    socialization and education but a separation
    exists socialization does not operate like
    education

17
Bibliography
  • Friesen, N. Hug, T.  (2009). The Mediatic Turn
    Exploring Consequences for Media Pedagogy.  In K.
    Lundby (Ed.). Mediatization Concept, Changes,
    Consequences. New York Peter Lang. Pp. 64-81
    http//learningspaces.org/n/papers/Media_Pedagogy_
    _Mediatic_Turn.pdf  
  • Postman, N (1994). The Disappearance of
    Childhood. New York Random House.
  • Eisenstein, E. (1982). The Printing Press as an
    Agent of Change. Cambridge, UK Cambridge UP.
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