Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Lessons to incorporate in the classroom






Above are the lessons that I implemented in the classroom setting for this assignment.

Monday, March 3, 2014

Pros & Cons To New Literacies

Pros To New Literacies: 

  • Innovative thinking can occur through the use of technology 
  • Inclusion for all students in the classroom 
  • Higher student engagement 
  • Technology integration
  • Easily transferred to home life or other social networks of friends 
  • Community connections
  • Meaning making 
  • Students reading more frequently 
  • Students reading for longer periods of time 
  • Development of critical thinking 
  • Increase in fluency 
  • Development of vocabulary 
  • Broadening a students schema 
  • Collaboration through literacy instruction 


Cons To New Literacies: 
  • Sufficient funds for schools to purchase materials and equipment needed 
  • Does the reader maintain full engagement while being involved in the text
  • Lack of preparation from the educator to utilize technology properly 
  • Consistency in authentic and appropriate text for students 
  • Ensuring the safety of your students through the use of the internet 
  • That the technology is not equipped to meet the Common Core Standards requested by the state. 
  • Little consistency in multimedia formatting of information 
  • Little in the way of quality control of information that is constructed and communicated 
  • Amount of information [“info-garbage”] can be overwhelming
  • Many resources are out of date or have not been updated for years
  • Digital manipulation is a popular form of deception
  • Information for kids is intertwined with hidden social, economic and political agendas




References: 
http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBMBLhqMGjecUL0b1amqeSw

http://www.lite.iwarp.com/compint.html



What About New Literacies

"At the current rate of growth, more than one-half of the world’s population will be online in five to seven years and most of the world will be online in 10 to 15 years" (Leu, D. J et al,. p. 5).  Students will be able to deliver information more clearly, transfer knowledge to other individuals faster, come to solutions more quickly, and evaluate information more effectively through the utilization of new literacies.  

To be literate today often means being able to use some combination of blogs, wikis, texting, search engines, Facebook, foursquare, Google Docs, Skype, Chrome, iMovie, Contribute, Basecamp, or many other relatively new technologies, including thousands of mobile applications, or “apps”(Leu, D. J et al,. p. 6).  How will this play a role in our students learning? Reading online can be a collarbortive process for all of your students in the classroom. It can be a time where students can take a topic or research and work together to find multiple solutions or key findings within that research.  


Because networked information technologies invite more and diverse people to exchange information, the new literacies require us to read more critically and they enable us to develop new insights about far more cultural traditions and ways of knowing than we have ever experienced.  Being sensitive to this diversity and developing more critical reading skills within networked ICT will be an important aspect of the new literacies. 
 Courtesy of: http://www.sp.uconn.edu/~djleu/newlit.html

According to the International Reading Association,  to become fully literate in today's society students need to become proficient in the technologies of the 21st century.  With this evaluation, it is important that educators effectively integrate these technologies in the the learning environment.   One quote that I found within researching new literacies stuck out over the majority.  "As readers actively read for the purpose of comprehension, they think of many things and apply various strategies. For example, they activate prior knowledge; create mental images; examine the text’s structure and organization; and notice symbols, images, and other literary devices. These activities can be categorized as reader factors and text factors"(Larson, L. p. 281). "Technology is argued as a solution that will close the gap between teachers, and the traditional method of teaching, and students of the new generation. E-books provide an opportunity for teachers and children to connect and share knowledge, build relationships through literacy developing activities, and enhance stimulation in literacy enriched environments (Strickland & Morrow, 1989). Larson (2008) argues that altering traditional reading workshops to electronic reading workshops is crucial, as well as, educating teachers on how to implement technology and effectively use e-books within an elementary classroom" (Wright, S., Fugett, A., & Caputa, F., 2013. p. 368)
I did not  realize when activating a students schema that not only do previous literary works play a role in their prior knowledge but technology and experiences surrounding technology.  



References: 
Leu, D. J., McVerry, J., O'Byrne, W., Kiili, C., Zawilinski, L., Everett-Cacopardo, H., & ... Forzani, E. (2011). The New Literacies of Online Reading Comprehension: Expanding the Literacy and Learning Curriculum. Journal Of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 55(1), 5-14


Larson, L. (2012). It's Time to Turn the Digital Page: Preservice Teachers Explore E-Book Reading. Journal Of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 56(4), 280-290 (new literacies) 

Wright, S., Fugett, A., & Caputa, F. (2013). Using E-readers and Internet Resources to Support Comprehension. Journal Of Educational Technology & Society, 16(1), 367-379.

Why Should This Be Important To Me As A Future Educator?

The one thing that comes to mind when I think of teaching students that are have a learning disability is "how can I reach them to teach them?" It is something that makes me start thinking of the possibilities out there for not only students with disabilities but general education students.  

New Literacies is making its mark on the forefront and paving the way for new learning in classrooms. Not only does it provide multiple outlooks for students but also gives educators a different way to approach a lesson or topic. 
I believe that differentiated instruction  & applying new literacies can coincide with one another. Differentiated instruction is the option where educators can structure learning environments that address the variety of learning styles, interests, and abilities found within a classroom. When reaching those different learning styles, new literacies can take place in helping those teachers differentiate to meet the needs of that child.