Politicians, newspaper reporters and parents alike seem to need to classify young people’s work as either screen-based or social; as either virtual or ‘real’; as either digital or print. This provocation uses classroom video footage to demonstrate the imbrication of digital- and print-based literacies that is supported when expert literacy teachers use mobile touch screen devices with their students. The aim is to expose the nonsense of dichotomous thinking in relation to teaching and curriculum practices.
Provocation: The notional distinction between digital- and print-based is easily troubled when we look at practice, but clearly this distinction serves some agendas well, particularly in terms of the ‘fit’ with, and reproduction of, established practices for managing resources and knowledge. If this distinction is largely a fiction, what might the public relations ‘spin’ be that would speak productively to stakeholders in literacy education?
History
Location
Burwood, Vic.
Start date
2015-07-17
End date
2015-07-17
Language
eng
Publication classification
X Not reportable, E3.1 Extract of paper
Copyright notice
2015, Deakin University
Title of proceedings
Digital Literacies Come to School: Uses and impacts of mobile touch screen devices on early literacy teaching and learning
Event
Digital Literacies Come to School. Research Symposium (2015 : Burwood, Vic.)