Thanks for your collaborative work this weekend in class. You spent time demonstrating your collaboration and communication skills for comprehension of readings, NL tools, and topics for your chapter of the iBook.
This coming week you will be extending the creative collaboration and communication around comprehension: What is it in digital spaces? What supports it on Web 2.0? Which of the social practices might contribute to it? An additional topic is how eBooks contribute to comprehension, and in fact, my aha moment of the readings, what "taken for granted" book handling skills need to be revisited in order to comprehend a story or a piece of text in the e-world. So before you begin reading, here are some questions to think about: What does it mean to comprehend? How are vocabulary and fluency related to comprehension in digital spaces? What do you think might be different as you move from a print environment to a digital one?
As I was reading, I came upon a reference to Bloom's Taxonomy and its revision to be a digital taxonomy. Take a look at it below.
Keep this in mind as you read the chapters in the Johnson book and the two articles. In your blog discussion, refer to the digital Bloom's to identify the comprehension/thinking that you might be encouraging with students in each of the activities or ideas presented. We will have started a list of Web. 2.0 resources and ways to support both NL and nl skills for collaboration and communication in class on Saturday, so be sure to discuss in your blogs making a list from this week's readings to bring to our whole group Adobe Connect meeting.
Have a good week!
Saturday, September 26, 2015
Friday, September 18, 2015
Week 5 Collaboration and communication for comprehension
I did get to visit a school, so here are 2 pictures of the school setting. I'll bring more pictures to class on Sept. 26 (remember that we are meeting from 1-5 in Rm. 334 on that date). I'll also bring pictures of those two young giraffes we saw snacking on trees on our way to school.
Just a note: I've uploaded the rubrics for participation/professionalism and for the blogging onto D2L. I edited both of them a bit, so make sure you check them out. Additionally, here is the link for you to fill out the form on choosing chapter topics for our iBook: http://goo.gl/forms/jmqt16Hau6
Please complete the form by Thursday evening. We will discuss and finalize topics in class.
Thanks for your diligence in responding to my blog and in writing about the ideas related to New Literacies/new literacies. I do want to remind you that your blogs are discussions. Try to stay away from serial monologues.
We are moving into Module 2 about Web 2.0 resources and supporting NL/nl skills and social practices--the more practical piece. Remember to always be thinking about why the resources and skills are related to NL theory and to the important social practices that underlie that theory and the uses of those skills. This week we are focusing on collaboration and communication for comprehension--three of the C's that are key skills for participating successfully in NL. Before you begin reading, think about your own collaboration and communication skills. What are your strengths in these areas? What about areas for improvement? How do you think technology or Web 2.0 sites can help you become a better communicator and collaborator? What do you hope to find out in the readings about the relationship of these two key NL skills to comprehension?
In your blogs, make connections between key ideas in the readings and your blogging. Think about the ties to your own settings. Finally, in the blogs, let me know questions you would like discussed in our face to face class (about anything related to the topic or assignments). We will be having a practice session on Google hangouts as well as deciding on dates for online class meetings and small group meetings via Google hangouts or another meeting format.
See you soon!
Just a note: I've uploaded the rubrics for participation/professionalism and for the blogging onto D2L. I edited both of them a bit, so make sure you check them out. Additionally, here is the link for you to fill out the form on choosing chapter topics for our iBook: http://goo.gl/forms/jmqt16Hau6
Please complete the form by Thursday evening. We will discuss and finalize topics in class.
Thanks for your diligence in responding to my blog and in writing about the ideas related to New Literacies/new literacies. I do want to remind you that your blogs are discussions. Try to stay away from serial monologues.
We are moving into Module 2 about Web 2.0 resources and supporting NL/nl skills and social practices--the more practical piece. Remember to always be thinking about why the resources and skills are related to NL theory and to the important social practices that underlie that theory and the uses of those skills. This week we are focusing on collaboration and communication for comprehension--three of the C's that are key skills for participating successfully in NL. Before you begin reading, think about your own collaboration and communication skills. What are your strengths in these areas? What about areas for improvement? How do you think technology or Web 2.0 sites can help you become a better communicator and collaborator? What do you hope to find out in the readings about the relationship of these two key NL skills to comprehension?
In your blogs, make connections between key ideas in the readings and your blogging. Think about the ties to your own settings. Finally, in the blogs, let me know questions you would like discussed in our face to face class (about anything related to the topic or assignments). We will be having a practice session on Google hangouts as well as deciding on dates for online class meetings and small group meetings via Google hangouts or another meeting format.
See you soon!
Friday, September 11, 2015
Week 4 Planning for New Literacies/new literacies
Hi all, I was hoping to have the following paragraph as the head in for this week: As you read this, I will have just completed 4 days of school visits to primary schools in Kaijado County, Kenya. This county in Kenya borders with Tanzania and is predominantly rural. The population is primarily (although not exclusively) Masai. The teachers will all speak Maa (if they are Masai) or another tribal language, English, and Swahili (the 2 official languages of Kenya and the languages of instruction in schools). Primary schools are grades 1-8. Teachers in most primary schools do not have university degrees. If I have decent access to internet before this blog goes live, I'll try to insert some pictures of what I've seen. The schools I'm visiting are part of the project I work with call Reading Kenya. The first cohort of 25 schools each received a trunk of books to start their school library as well as training for a teacher librarian. The teachers in grades K-3 in the schools are attending 3 week-long workshops taught by school leaders in the county (who worked with us for 9 months to learn the content and how to do interactive PD), the third of which is beginning on Sept. 14. They have learned about early literacy development and teaching strategies and activities to support literacy learning. What really happened is that the teachers here are on strike, and have been for 2 weeks, with no end in sight. The law mandated a raise in salary of 50% (from about $200 per month to about $300 per month) but the Ministry office that oversees teachers (the Teacher Service commission) refused. The teachers went to court and were supported all of the way to the Supreme Court but the TSC is still refusing. So as you read this, I have been able to visit 1 school and observe a kindergarten teacher (they are not part of the teacher's union---long story). As I write, I am in Nairobi and have met with my Kenyan colleagues both out in the country and here. If you read this on Saturday, I'm on my way home (but don't tell anyone!). :) I've been without internet so I'm late in reading your blogs but do look and see how I have commented. I'll also be getting back to you from the VCI early this coming week.
The readings for Week 4 focus on the planning process for integrating New Literacies/new literacies into your teaching and classrooms. Last week's readings also alluded to planning as part of describing new literacies on classrooms. I hope that as you read, even if the literal content is not about your teaching area or grade level, that you have been making connections to your own situation and in your mind, thinking about how the information could be used at your grade/age level.
Before you read, I want you to think about teh planning process that you use now in planning for instruction in your educational setting. Is there a framework you use? If so, what is it? How do you think that framework will carry over into planning for integration of new literacies? If you don't follow a framework for planning, what is your process.
As you read the BABR chapter and the articles, think about how the ideas they put forth are part of planning for instruction. How are they related to last week's readings? Compare and contrast the different frameworks? How are the readings all connected to this week's overarching topic? What is new to you about this process and what is just an expansion of what you already do?
Have a good week! I'll be back in Oklahoma by Monday so if you need me, I can Skype.
The readings for Week 4 focus on the planning process for integrating New Literacies/new literacies into your teaching and classrooms. Last week's readings also alluded to planning as part of describing new literacies on classrooms. I hope that as you read, even if the literal content is not about your teaching area or grade level, that you have been making connections to your own situation and in your mind, thinking about how the information could be used at your grade/age level.
Before you read, I want you to think about teh planning process that you use now in planning for instruction in your educational setting. Is there a framework you use? If so, what is it? How do you think that framework will carry over into planning for integration of new literacies? If you don't follow a framework for planning, what is your process.
As you read the BABR chapter and the articles, think about how the ideas they put forth are part of planning for instruction. How are they related to last week's readings? Compare and contrast the different frameworks? How are the readings all connected to this week's overarching topic? What is new to you about this process and what is just an expansion of what you already do?
Have a good week! I'll be back in Oklahoma by Monday so if you need me, I can Skype.
Friday, September 4, 2015
Week 3: What do New Literacies/new literacies look like in classrooms?
As you are reading this blog, I'm in Capetown, South Africa at the Pan Africa Reading for All conference. After two days of traveling to get here (and arriving in the late evening) I first went to a preconference institute sponsored by the International Literacy Association around universal literacy. I learned quite a bit about what the challenges are for educators on the African continent. It gave me a chance to learn more about these initiatives and what goals are for the future. I presented with my friend Dr. Angela Ward and our two Kenyan colleagues, Dr. Adelheid Bwire and Dr. George Andima, about starting up professional reading groups with our Kenyan teacher trainers and how they started them with their teacher groups. That presentation went well. I've heard from teachers who have between 56 and 120 elementary age children in their classrooms and how they are trying to support their literacy learning with only limited materials. Creativity is the key. I'll be flying to Kenya on Sunday, Sept. 6 to begin work with our teacher trainers and teachers there. I'll try to post pictures of the schools in the area on either next week's blog or the week after that. Access to New Literacy tools and connections may not be available away from the training facility.
Last week's readings were dense with terminology and concepts related to New Literacies and the skills, strategies, dispositions, social practices that are inherent in them. There was quite a bit to digest, and readings for this week were relatively less dense, so please make sure to revisit the ideas and use them in this week's blogs.
This week I'd like you to continue to think about what makes new literacies new and especially consider what they look like in classrooms. New literacies are not just about integration of technology but about how literacy is transformed. On this blog, tell us how you integrate new literacies into your classroom now. What do you do that you consider a transformation of literacy practices to fit with Knobel's definition of new literacies. Which social practices from the BABR chapter do you think you already focus on?
As your groups create your new blog entries for this week, please make sure to use the following terms in your discussions: goal driven reading and writing, affordances, constraints, open networked environments, multimodal texts, close or deep reading, design, literacy practices, social practices, collaboration, communication, critical stance. You will be introduced to frameworks for classroom practice including TPACK, TPACK+, 21st century literacy learning, open learning, IRT. You have already read about Literacy 2.0 and activity based curriculum. Discuss your thoughts on all of these frameworks: similarities, differences, challenges. Can you combine them? I know the discussion leaders will also have other insightful questions and reflections for you as well.
Don't forget to complete a virtual check in form for me please. Here is the link:http://goo.gl/forms/3BtgryiI9G
I'll get back to those of you via e-mail who have questions.
I'll be out in the country until Friday visiting schools so may not respond to any blogs until then. Have a good week!
Last week's readings were dense with terminology and concepts related to New Literacies and the skills, strategies, dispositions, social practices that are inherent in them. There was quite a bit to digest, and readings for this week were relatively less dense, so please make sure to revisit the ideas and use them in this week's blogs.
This week I'd like you to continue to think about what makes new literacies new and especially consider what they look like in classrooms. New literacies are not just about integration of technology but about how literacy is transformed. On this blog, tell us how you integrate new literacies into your classroom now. What do you do that you consider a transformation of literacy practices to fit with Knobel's definition of new literacies. Which social practices from the BABR chapter do you think you already focus on?
As your groups create your new blog entries for this week, please make sure to use the following terms in your discussions: goal driven reading and writing, affordances, constraints, open networked environments, multimodal texts, close or deep reading, design, literacy practices, social practices, collaboration, communication, critical stance. You will be introduced to frameworks for classroom practice including TPACK, TPACK+, 21st century literacy learning, open learning, IRT. You have already read about Literacy 2.0 and activity based curriculum. Discuss your thoughts on all of these frameworks: similarities, differences, challenges. Can you combine them? I know the discussion leaders will also have other insightful questions and reflections for you as well.
Don't forget to complete a virtual check in form for me please. Here is the link:http://goo.gl/forms/3BtgryiI9G
I'll get back to those of you via e-mail who have questions.
I'll be out in the country until Friday visiting schools so may not respond to any blogs until then. Have a good week!
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