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By Henry Jenkins on May 20, 2010 7:56 AM
| Permalink
Often, the teaching of the new media literacies is understood as
either the domain of a specific digital specialist or as the work of
language arts or arts instructors. Yet you offer many examples of how
and why this approach should impact other disciplinary domains. Why
should these skills and knowledge be integrated across the curriculum?
Erin:
If you look at these three words, New + Media + Literacies ...there are
different ways to interpret them. You could read it as "New Media"
Literacies or "New" Media Literacies. Either way, there is no wrong
answer. "New" Media Literacies does build upon the media literacy movement
where we move from being empowered by media to critically analyze the
media we consume through asking important reflective questions to now
being producers of media ourselves. And in this new role as producer,
there are new questions to ask and new ways to think and act on how to
be an integral part of shaping and contributing my perception of the
world.
But also, "New Media" Literacies is a new form of literacy and helps
teachers understand that our students are reading and writing in new
ways. Reading and writing was once relegated to reading books and
writing papers, but now we write into meaning through new media such as
video, audio or even construction of physical objects. A possible hypothesis is that the educational system has not caught
up with the shifting landscape of participatory culture where there are
new ways to read, write, and compute numbers. PAST PRESENT
Reading a Book Reading a Transmedia Story
Writing Alone Networked Writing
Memorizing Formulas Gaming as Problem Solving This shift changes the focus of literacy from individual expression
to community involvement where creativity and active participation are
the hallmark. And it makes it increasingly important to understand and
be competent in the skills of citizenship, art, and expression of social
connectivity. These are the skills identified in our white paper as
the New Media Literacies and ones we need to foster as we think about
education. We are in a paradigm shift in the classroom where educators need to
work in the gap between life and school. You only have to observe your
students outside of the classroom for a few hours to see that they are
immersed in this digital culture. This is not a "special treat if
they're good" sort of immersion but a complete shift. It's their way of
life. Incorporating participatory practices into the classroom -- such
as remixing, Wikipedia, SNS, or even mobile -- allows for a blurring of
boundaries between informal and formal learning and harnesses the power
of digital technologies for students to reflect on the participatory
culture that they live in. This provides teachers an opportunity to offer learning objectives in
their classrooms in a new way, while at the same time offering students
opportunities to read and write their cultural practices that are
central to their own everyday experience.
You point to a kind of generation gap around Wikipedia where
students love it and teachers are wary. What do you see as meaningful
steps forward in addressing these different perceptions of the value of
Wikipedia? Are there examples of teachers who are effectively
integrating Wikipedia into their teaching?
Jessica:
A first step is for our educational community to view Wikipedia as a
collaborative learning environment. At first glance Wikipedia is
perceived as simply an online encyclopedia--it's a product. Our
community should look beyond the surface and focus on Wikipedia as a
venue for contributing, editing and the sharing of one's expertise. For
me, educators can learn a lot by creating low-risk environments in which
making mistakes and struggling to come to an answer are the norm.
Although someone can delete my additions to a Wikipedia entry, I can
engage in a conversation around why this happened. I am part of a larger
discussion around the creation and sharing of knowledge rather than
being told I am incorrect and here is the right answer. Engaging a
student can depend on whether or not she believes her input matters. Yet
an engaged student must also be open to negotiation, revision, and
change as these are inherent to the learning process. I learn from my
mistakes just as I learn from my accomplishments.
I also think that Wikipedia should not be banned in schools (although
there are issues of determining the appropriateness of content). I
think it is an excellent starting point for research--as long as both
teachers and students understand its strengths and weaknesses. And this
means that all teachers need to teach what it means to research
something in their disciplines. The act of researching is an act of
accessing, analyzing, evaluating, and assessing information as well as
its source. These skills are vital to our digital media age and get at
the heart of bias, perspective, objectivity/subjectivity.
Erin:
The first meaningful step to recommend is for school administrators and
teachers to better understand Wikipedia's practice and the importance of
the new media literacies that are gained in its practice.
Wikipedia was a predominant activity we encouraged in NML's pilot
studies last year. However, this activity had numerous road-blocks. We
had one teacher comment, "When I've looked at pages in Wikipedia, I've
found that some are not very accurate or complete. I'll use it in my
classroom, when they go in and fix it." This shows that we need to help
teachers understand that "they" is the community of users and that
community could include the teacher and her students. We also found
that Wikipedia was often blocked at the schools we piloted our resources
in, and had to go to measures to get it unblocked in order to use it
for the class period.
One of the most valuable segments of Wikipedia's use was observing
Global Kids' Media Masters program create the Prospect Heights Campus
Wikipedia Project, which spanned five weeks. The Wikipedia page about
the Prospect Heights Campus was a place for students to document
information about the campus, its schools, history, and whatever else
the students decided was important to include in an entry - and a place
for them to do so publicly and neutrally. There are many examples of a
structured learning environment of wikis or wiki pages being created;
however, Global Kids chose to use Wikipedia and not develop a pbwiki or
something similar for just their group of students to view.
Trying to replicate Wikipedia through pbwiki, or some other wiki
software, certainly has its benefits. It is what might be termed a
"walled garden" approach, allowing students to tinker with wiki software
and yet not be exposed to the potentially disruptive larger Internet.
However, choosing a walled garden approach also has many costs. Students
who already use the internet know very well what is actually "out
there," and the walled garden runs the risk of losing their interest -
because, after all, a walled garden isn't the "real world." Even if
students are unfamiliar with the Internet, using a walled garden
approach precludes the possibility of emergent learning.
If a teacher develops a project in a walled garden, that is where it
stays. It cannot become part of the information ecology of the web, and
students cannot thereby learn about community participation. Nor can
they be convinced that their work has any greater significance than
"something I had to do to get a grade." They know very well that their
work will never receive any attention from people who are not in their
class.
In Global Kids' Media Masters class, however, the students were
energized by the knowledge that 1) they were filling a real need on
Wikipedia, and 2) their work was going to become part of the great
online knowledge base. The students prepared their page, but when it
came time to copy and paste it into Wikipedia, they were nervous,
excited, and thrilled. The act of pushing the "submit" button - that is,
the act of submitting their classwork to their teacher - was suddenly
pregnant with significance. They weren't just turning in homework. They
were putting themselves out there and helping shape the way the public
would see their high school - would see them.
Your book's contributors involve both academic researchers and
practicing educators. What do you see as the most important points or
contact or divergence between the ways these two contributors approached
the concerns the book raises?
Jessica:
Classroom teachers are often voicing their concerns about a lack of
opportunity to sit down with their colleagues and discuss important
issues; time is not allocated for them to be part of a learning
community. I have had similar experiences as a professor in academia.
In both realms, there is a tendency to work extremely hard in isolation.
My hope is that this book can serve as a conduit for academic
researchers and practicing educators to talk about their findings, their
experiences, and their hopes for new and different teaching and
learning environments. We must remember that there is always something
to learn about our disciplines by looking outside of them.
What I find wonderful about the contributors to the book is that
researchers like danah boyd would welcome an opportunity to sit down
with classroom teachers and talk about the ethics of social networks and
what it means to be part of a network, just as English teacher Amy
Crawford would jump at a chance to talk to researchers about her
students as textual borrowers--as remixers and media makers in her
classroom. There are many points of interest here and, to be frank, we
must be open to these kinds of trans-academic connections and
discussions because we need each other as allies to move forward in
rethinking learning, literacy, and technology integration.
Much of the book tries to help teachers overcome their anxieties
about working with new media technologies and practices. So, let me
ask, which concerns do you think are valid? Where should teachers and
schools go slowly in embracing these new media?
Maryanne:
With regard to embracing technology, I think that teachers need think
through the consequences of implementing any innovation. For example if
a teacher hosts a blog where students post satiric pieces about the
school, the administration might feel that some of the postings conflict
with the image of the school they wish to project to the community. In
any social network there are going to be "in-house" jokes that might
puzzle or even offend outsiders. Teachers need to take a clear look at
new media practices and consider how they will change when they are
employed in school settings. With the ability to broadcast thoughts,
ideas and products, also comes the responsibility for considering who
the audience will be and how they might respond.
Any time a teacher is asking students to perform activities in a
virtual environment, be it posting on a website, or interacting in an
immersive setting, she must consider her duties to guide, protect and
mentor her students. Teacher need to think the way they do when they
take students on field trips and make clear guidelines regarding their
expectations. It is not foolish to be cautious; it would only be
foolish to miss out on incredible opportunities for learning simply
because teachers were not willing to plan and prepare for the excursion.
Jessica:
Technology can be a scary proposition for some teachers. For both
novice and veteran technology users, integrating this element into their
curriculum and feeling the need to be knowledgeable can be intimidating
and anxiety inducing. Additionally, teachers rarely have time to
pursue their own professional development (e.g. PD that isn't mandated
by the school/district), which would allow them to bring something new
to their curriculum. The anxiety comes from feeling like there is too
much technology to learn, too little time to learn it, and not enough of
the right support from employers to really grapple with it. One option
is to utilize the knowledge of the classroom: no one knows everything
about technology so who knows how to do what? Is there an opportunity
for students, parents, or community members to step up in a
technological role? Even though this shift in thinking may challenge our
notions of authority and expertise within a classroom, it opens up the
possibility to create a community of learners made up of both teachers
and students working toward a common goal.
Since we know that time and anxiety are key issues for teachers, then
let's change the culture of professional development: let's view PD not
as a one-day affair with an "expert" but as an ongoing project with a
group of educators dedicated to learning, creating, discussing,
experimenting, and reflecting on their philosophy of technology and its
integration.
You have created this book to spark conversations with teachers.
What steps have you taken to continue this dialogue once the book is
published?
Jessica:
It seemed illogical to invite classroom teachers to join a discussion
without offering an online space to help promote and nurture such a
discussion. I created this social network
(http://teachingtechsavvykids.com) in the hopes that both researchers
and practicing educators could connect and discuss issues important to
them as well as the issues the book addresses. I view the site as a way
to collaborate, share stories of hope, frustration, and change, and
tackle some of the tough questions of this profound moment. Ann Lauriks,
a middle school counselor who contributed to the book, has already
promised to write another piece to share with the new online community.
In addition, some of the researchers who contributed to the book along
with other colleagues have expressed interest in sharing their ideas and
personal experiences within this space. I am excited to see the
enthusiasm and ongoing commitment to continue this discussion and
collaboration and I hope all educators will feel inclined to
participate.
Maryanne Berry enjoys a high school teaching career that has spanned a
quarter of a century. The longer she teaches, the more fascinated she
becomes with the ways young people learn. She is currently a doctoral
candidate in the Graduate School of Education at U.C. Berkeley
Phil Halpern is the lead teacher of Communication Arts and Sciences, a
small school within Berkeley High School, where he teaches a variety of
English and communications classes. He traces his interest in media
education to the weekly television news program he helped produce while
in
high school back in the earliest days of videotape.
Erin B. Reilly is the research director for Project New Media
Literacies
first at MIT and now at USC. She is a recognized expert in the design
and
development of thought-provoking and engaging educational content
powered
by virtual learning and new media applications, known best for her work
with women and girls in Zoey's Room.
Jessica K. Parker is currently an assistant professor at Sonoma State
University, and she studies how secondary schools integrate multimedia
literacy into academic literacy learning. She has taught middle school,
high school, and college students for over a decade and has also created
and taught professional development courses for teachers.
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