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Developing Transliteracy: Bridging the Classroom Community Gap. Amy Leonard and Sarah Lisha De Anza College Innovations 2012 Conference March 6, 2012. Icebreaker. What was your first computer?. Traditional Literacy & Digital Literacy. What is your definition literacy?.
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Developing Transliteracy: Bridging the Classroom Community Gap Amy Leonard and Sarah Lisha De Anza College Innovations 2012 Conference March 6, 2012
Icebreaker What was your first computer?
Traditional Literacy & Digital Literacy What is your definition literacy? What would you consider a text?
Definitions • Literacy is the ability to read and write coherently for meaning and knowledge. • The written word, body language, media • Digital Literacy is the ability to use technology and read digital texts. (IRA)
What is Transliteracy? The ability to read, write, and interact across multiple platforms, both traditional and digital. Dr. Alan Liu, English Department, UCSB
Why is Community Important in the Developmental Classroom? Fostering community creates strong bonds that lead to better student retention and success. Tuckman, Bruce. (1965). “Developmental sequence in small groups.”
How Can We Use Social Networks to Bridge the Gap Between the Classroom Community and Students’ Social Communities?
Past and Present Generations • Traditionalists: 1900-1945 • Baby Boomers: 1946-1964 • Generation X: 1965-1977 • Generation Y (The Millennials): 1978-1995 • Generation Z (The New Millennials): 1996-now
Changing Definitions of Community • Traditionalists: Respect authority, personal contact, technology=radio • Baby Boomers: Questioned authority, phone contact, technology=tv • Generation X: Independent, email contact, technology=computers • Millennials & • New Millennials Independent, text/email/IM contact, technology=internet
Digital Natives vs. Digital Immigrants Terms coined by Marc Prensky in his article “Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants” (2001). Digital Immigrants: Generations that did not grow up with computer technology and, thus, are skeptical of it. Digital Natives: Generations that were born into computer technology and, thus, view it as necessary and essential.
PEW Research Center August 2011 • Most students will take online classes, predict 50% of college presidents. • More than half the textbooks used by undergrads will be entirely digital, predict 42% of college presidents. • 41% of college presidents say students are allowed to use laptops or other portable devices during class. • 87% of college presidents use a smartphone daily. 83% use a desktop computer and 65% use a laptop. 49% use a tablet, and 42% use an e-reader.
Gartner Survey on Digital Reading Preferences April 2011 The time people spend reading on a digital screen is now almost equal to the time spent reading printed paper text.
Using Social Networks in the Classroom Facebook (social network website): class groups, discussion posts, reminders, and creative projects. Twitter (social networking and microblogging): class discussions, reminders, connections to the community. Google Docs (web-based word processor): allows for real time collaboration, store and share documents. Tumblr (blogging site): allows for group discussion on a topic or essay.
Questions • What are the advantages and disadvantages of using social networking in an academic setting? • Is it appropriate to have facebook (or other social networking) groups for students or should online communities be kept to school websites? • Would you incorporate social networking into your classroom? • Do you think that incorporating social networking into academia will aid or hurt students as they move on from being students in the 21st century?
Challenges • Student participation • Making the online spaces “normal” not classroom • Access to technology • Institutions’ contracts with Blackboard or Angel • Lack of wi-fi in classrooms • Finding a balance between Contextualizing Content and being overly content focused. • Cyber Citizenship
Benefits • Create transferring skills they have to academic environments through authentic tasks. • Students learn skills that will help them think critically about “digital texts” • Students are engaged in the material and assignments • Develop transferrable skills for future college classes and the work world • Helping students bridge the digital divide • Create a community that can go beyond the classroom
Ways to Get Started • Transliteracy Level 1 • Add one type of online element to a unit of your class make it optional for students • Transliteracy Level 2 • Add a transliteracy unit or assignment that uses an online element • Transliteracy Level 3 • Fully intergrate a social community online and have students analyze online texts, as well as create a working definition of a cyber bill of rights.
Thanks for Coming! Please email us for more information: Amy Leonard leonardamy@fhda.edu Sarah Lisha lishasarah@fhda.edu OR check out Amy’s website: www.deanza.edu/faculty/leonardamy/innovations