[Transliteracy in my Classrooms]
Ok, so I'm halfway through the second week of lecturing. Classes seem to be going well (students are coming to class and participating! yay!) and essays, stories and grammar theory are being studied.
As I flip through the syllabus and note my "blog comment" assignments and "blog post" reflections the word transliteracy flits back and forth in my mind. Transliteracy of course isn't on the curriculum but neither are blogging or media literacy per se. Though transliteracy is always under development, I'm feeling a strong pull to encourage students to see their movements from writing essays in class, group presentations, blogging, reading online narratives like Inanimate Alice, and designing posters (tweeting comes later on) as examples of being transliterate. I wonder if they can name their behaviour, their learning might have even more resonance? I remind my students that we're participating in the online environment and honing our new/social media (and transliterate) skills because when they enter the workforce, they'll need to be prepared. Librarian by Day gives some good life examples on the necessity to be transliterate:
"Government agencies are no longer issuing print forms, you have to access them online. Your health insurance plan was a website and you have an account, when you call they will tell you to go there to get information. Banks are sending alerts and account balance information via text messages. Facebook privacy settings are complex and change frequently. The price of computers is dropping allowing more people to own one. Free WiFi access points are increasing, allowing more people internet access."
If our students don't experience these kinds of movement, from offline to online, how will they learn to be literate (not just trial and error or basic proficiencies)? I feel more and more strongly that helping to develop these transliterate skills needs a place in a classroom (though some, of course, are better equipped than others).
There are lots of ways to begin. Students can use blog posts as reading or reflective learning journals. They can add comments on to the teacher-managed class blog as a way of interacting in class discussion, sharing ideas and even doing pre or post-reading activities. The Future of Ed. site suggests venturing into transliteracy by:
- Viewing or posting a video around your lesson plan or around an educational component on TeacherTube
- Trying e-learning for your own professional development
- Learning how The Transliteracies Project is designing technology to improve the experience of reading for people of all backgrounds
- Exploring how archaeology and media can be used in your next class at MetaMedia
- Downloading courses from Stanford University on iTunes, MIT OpenCourseWare, or another open access sites for use in your classrorom
Also from the Future of Ed. site, this video with director of Media X's (at Stanford) Chuck House on the 21st century workforce:
Labels: 21st century, education, learning, learning styles, new media, pedagogy, social media, teaching, transdisciplinary, transliteracy



jess @ jesslaccetti.co.uk




2 Comments:
Its great to see others thinking about transliteracy and better yet thinking about it while teaching!
Thanks Bobbi.
I think there is a lot of assumption that our students, those "millenials" are au fait with technology and how it affects/influences and changes their reading, writing, thinking (the list goes on). Some people use the term "digital native" as synonomous with (trans) literacy but at least in my classes I'm not seeing the evidence. Sure, students have mobiles and laptops but that doesn't necessarily mean they are transliterate (which of course - for me - includes reflective and critical thinking about each mode).
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