Title: Literacy%20Practitioners
1 Literacy Practitioners Perspectives on Adult
Learning Needs and Technology Approaches in
Indigenous Communities Michelle Eady
University of Wollongong, Tony Herrington Curtin
University
- From Strength to Strength ACAL 1-3 October,
Freemantle WA
2Acknowledgement
- I would like to acknowledge all of the First
Nations Learners and Practioners who have opened
their hearts and minds to the idea of online
Literacy Learning. I would like to acknowledge
Aboriginal community members, the traditional
custodians and owners of the land on which we
meet here today. I would also like to acknowledge
the elders both past and present of this and
other nations represented here.
3Background
- Canadian
- University of Wollongong Alumni, 1996
- Fort Severn
- Northwest Territories
- Sioux Lookout
- Teacher, college (TAFE) instructor, distance
projects coordinator - International Scholarship UoW PhD in Education
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7History of Project
- Responded to call out for proposals by Ministry
of Training Colleges and University Ontario in
Spring 2003 - Sioux Hudson Literacy Councils Good Learning
Anywhere proposal and business plan accepted
December 2003 - Four organizations approved at this time for
pilots to run from January 2004 to March 2005 - Project continues and is funded through to March
2010
8Literacy in Ontario
- Streamed into categories
- Anglophone
- Francophone
- Native
- Deaf
- Provincially funded, based on learner number,
learner skills attainment
9Some Comparisons
- Western Australia
- 2,525,500 sq. km square kilometers
- 1,600,000 people
- Population density 0.84 people per square
kilometre (2007) - Northwestern Ontario
- 385,000 square kilometers
- 234,771 people
- Population density 0.6 people per square
kilometre (2006)
10Canadian Statistics
- 31 of Aboriginal people living on reserve in
Ontario have less than Grade 9 or no formal
education at all, compared to 10 in the
non-Aboriginal population - more than triple the
rate. - (Registered Indian Population by Region and Type
of Residence, December 31, 2005. , Department
of Indian Affairs and Northern Development
2006). - Aboriginal high school graduation rates reports a
33 successful high school graduation rate
compared to the mainstream population rate of
66 (Stats Can, 2001).
11Australian Statistics
- Australian Bureau of Statistics document
entitled, Aspects of Literacy Assessed Skill
Levels Australia -1996 reports approximately 44
of Indigenous Australians have low literacy
levels in Standard Australian English, compared
with 19 of non-Indigenous Australians
(Australian Bureau of Statistics, 1996). - Indigenous Australian people are much more likely
to live in remote areas than the rest of the
population, and that there is a higher level of
urbanisation among the non-Indigenous population
than the Indigenous population (Australian Bureau
of Statistics, 2002).
12Ice Roads In Ontarios Far North
13Going to Australias Outback
14Teacher Assistant Career Training
15Future Heavy Equipment Operators
16BOLD Project
17Mining Project
18Hospital Project
19I am looking for some help
- I am looking for some volunteers who have worked
or are currently working with Indigenous literacy
learners who would like to participate in a focus
group that will contribute to this research - Possibly two 1 hour focus groups to discuss what
the literature says, and what you feel you know
about working with Indigenous literacy learners - Please contact me if interested!
Michelle Eady eadyconsulting_at_sympatico.ca 011 61
2 4221 3613 (no machine)
20Research Design - DBR
Design-based Research
Design-based research approach (Reeves, 2006)
21Summarizing the Theoretical Framework
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23The research problem
- The vast majority of Australian Indigenous
- learners, both urban and remote have low
- literacy needed for personal and
- employability goals and there is a need to
- engage these learners in effective ways that
- results in improvements of these statistics.
24Research Questions
- What are the literacy needs of an Indigenous
community? - What are the perceived needs and approaches to
these needs as shown in the literature? - What do literacy practitioners perceive to be the
literacy needs in Indigenous communities? - What are the self-identified literacy needs in an
Indigenous community? - What are the literacy needs of an Indigenous
community as perceived by community members? - What types of support systems are available to
the community? - How can self-identified literacy needs for an
Indigenous community be supported by online
synchronous learning technologies?
25Phase 1
- What are the literacy needs of an Indigenous
community? - What are the perceived needs and approaches to
these needs as shown in the literature? - What do literacy practitioners perceive to be the
literacy needs in Indigenous communities?
26Online Focus Group Research
- Traditionally, focus groups, regardless of
purpose, have been conducted in a face to face
situation. But today, electronic communication
technologies have enabled researchers to utilize
new approaches to this form of research. - (Rezabek, 2000)
27Advantages
- Can involve individuals from many different
geographical areas - No limit for data flow in number of words
generated - Alternative pathways
- Cost effective
- Recordable
- Data sharing
- Various research methods
- Immediate feedback
- Visual interactions
28Limitations
- Internet connectivity
- Access to hardware
- Access to platforms
- Reading, writing and typing skills
- Ethical issues in online interviews and research
29Must dos
- Decide what platform to use - asynchronous or
synchronous platforms or both? - Recruit online participants
- Establish online rapport and trust
- Feel comfortable with platform
- Know how to troubleshoot
- Match interviewer and interviewees
- Someone who is aware of the field
- Understands who they are in the picture
30Practitioner Volunteers Locations
31Training and Experience
- Advance diploma in Fine Arts, Cert IV Training
and Assessment, Masters of Education - Bachelor of Arts, Dip Ed Secondary, CELTA
- Bachelor of Science, Grad Dip Ed,, Adv Dip LLN in
Vocational Education - Grad Dip Adult Education, Grad Dip Aboriginal and
intercultural studies - Bachelor of Education
- Masters of Professional Education and Training
- Ph D in Education, Bed, CGEd and Dip Workplace
assessment and training - Social work degree, communication studies and
post graduate social work - Diploma of Community development
- Group average experience 11 years 6 months
32Roles of Literacy Practitioners in Indigenous
Communities
- Knowledge Broker
- Social Interpreter
- Conduit
- Empowerment Coach
- Advocate
- Liaison
- Community Member
- Facilitator
- Team Leader
- Negotiator
33Emerging Themes
- Need for a better understanding of the
complexities of the Indigenous learner from both
a language and a personal perspective. - Need for improvement of all literacy skills.
- Need to help to better support the children in
the community. - Need for literacy to provide a voice for the
community.
34Positive Approaches
- Using culturally relevant approaches and
culturally relevant material - Community /learner ownership and community
development focus - Facilitating a mentorship program
35Are we using technology?
- Type of Software
- Social Computing/Networking
- Blogging
- Face book
- Email
- Skype
- Elluminate
- PowerPoint
- e-books
- Google Groups
- Various games
- Digital Story
- Photo Story
- Movie Maker
36Are we using technology to teach literacy skills?
- Language skills
- Word processing
- Drivers license preparation
- Reading
- Researching
- Writing
- Oral presentation
- Communication skills
- Mentoring opportunities
- Tax filing skills
- Digital photography
- Job searching
- Banking
- Opportunity for higher education courses
37Barriers to Meeting Needs
- Government requirements, policies and funding
issues - Organizational capacity
- Lack of equipment, lack of internet
- Are we meeting the needs at all?
38How can technology change the way we support
Indigenous literacy learners?
- Showcases Indigenous peoples strengths
- Provides literacy and learning services in a
learners own environment - Higher education opportunities and job/work
readiness training programs - Means of communication
- Professional development opportunities
39- I feel as though that the experience that you
can have through computers is that there is
incredible mediacy (active and creative products
of media)and that it's a little bit like
drawing, that you have that sort of impact and
even though it neverit won't replace being in
front of a person and hearing the vibrations and
the sound of their voice and looking into
someone's eyes, it enables to cut through a lot
of layers that you knowthrough books or through
distance can isolate people
40- So using computers and technology can spark
creativity and a sense of hope that starts a
little kindling of fire within people that they
want to go and meet those people that they want
to go to those places and actually move towards
exposing themselves to something new. So I think
you know this is what the technology can do.
OPFEG_Kelvin_24/09
41Next steps
- Communities views
- Communities needs
- Guiding principles based on common threads
through literature, practitioners and community - Engaging community in a collaborative community
literacy project based on strengths and needs - Design-based principles for policy makers,
practitioners, and communities to support
effective practice of online technology in
Indigenous communities
42THANK YOU !
43References
- Anderson, T., Kanuka, H. (2003). E-research
Methods, strategies, and issues. Boston, MA Allyn
and Bacon - Evans, A., Elford, J., Wiggins, D. (2008).
Using the Internet for qualitative research. In
Handbook of Qualitative Research in Psychology
Sage. - Flick, E. (2009). An introduction to qualitative
research (4th ed.) SAGE. - Henderson, L. (1996). Instructional Design of
Interactive Multimedia A cultural critique.
ETRD, 44(4), 85-104. - Lobel, M., Neubauer, M., and Swedburg, R. (2005).
Comparing how students collaborate to learn about
the self and relationships in a real-time
non-turn-taking online and turn-taking
face-to-face environment. Journal of
Computer-Mediated Communication, 10(4), article
18. http//jcmc.indiana.edu/vol10/issue4/lobel.htm
l - Rezabek, Roger (2000). Online Focus Groups
Electronic Discussions for Research 67
paragraphs. Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung /
Forum Qualitative Social Research, 1(1), Art18,
http//nbn-resolving.de/urnnbnde0114-fqs0001185
. - Reeves, T. C. (2006). Design research from a
technology perspective. In J. Akker, K.
Gravemeijer, S. McKenney N. Nieveen (Eds.),
Educational Design Research (pp. 52-66). UK
Routledge.
44References (cont).
- Stein, D. (1998). Situated Learning in ERIC
Digest 195, from http//eric.ed.gov/ERICDocs/data/
ericdocs2sql/content_storage_01/0000019b/80/15/5e/
58.pdf - van der Veer, R., Valsiner, J. (1991).
Understanding Vygotsky. Oxford, UK Blackwell.
Adult Education Electronic Version.