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Literacy, technology and the economics of attention

journal contribution
posted on 2003-01-01, 00:00 authored by Christopher Bigum, M Knobel, C Lankshear, Leonie Rowan
This article is based on a project aimed at generating practical suggestions based on research findings about how new technologies might be used to enhance L1 literacy attainment in disadvantagedsettings. The project involved designing,implementing and researching an innovative approach to curriculum and pedagogy using new digital technologies in language and literacy education within classroom settings involving small groups of "disadvantaged'' learners. The paper reports activity and findings from one of four study sites. It focuses on four Grade 9 boys seen by their teachers as troublemakers and at risk of failing in English. The researchers draw on current conceptual and theoretical work associated with the emergence of an Attention Economy theory to design a collaborative activity around constructing a website, and to identify and analyse positive literacy learning outcomes associated with the pedagogical approach taken. The authors show how this new perspective on attention informs a critique of conventional approaches to school organization and classroom learning, and how it can be used to envisage alternative approaches to understanding and teaching students who display literacy learning difficulties at school.

History

Journal

L1-educational studies in language and literature

Volume

3

Issue

1-2

Pagination

95 - 122

Publisher

Springer Netherlands

Location

The Netherlands

ISSN

1567-6617

eISSN

1573-1731

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2003, Kluwer Academic Publishers

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