The New Literacy

Reading through Danial Chandler’s Technological or Media Determinism I was intrigued by his thoughts on technological autonomy, or the belief that we really have no control over the direction that technology is taking us.  “Technology which no-one seems to control seems to have ‘a will of its own’. This stance involves anthropomorphism or technological animism in its crediting of an inanimate entity with the consciousness and will of living beings.(Chandler, 1995, Technological Autonomy” para.8)    This fascinates me because even within technologies relentless march forward in this world I feel our education system is moving at a snail’s pace to adopt its advantages.  

Within my school more than half of our teachers don’t touch the computers and our photocopier remains our most used machine.  If technology is something that cannot be stopped then why is its adaption into education so slow? I believe what slowly happens is as Chandler states “What is more common is an interplay between newer and older media which may involve subtle shifts of function. (Chandler, 1995, “Techno-Evolution as ‘Progress’” para.1)  Gradually teachers will shift their classes to digital, paperless environments. The functionality of the copier is just transferred to a different medium that does not require physical paper to achieve the desired goal.  It is however something that will be slow to adopt and it will take years for everyone to move into this new way of storing and presenting information.   

I also wanted to look at the way we have chosen to assess our students in our present education system.  A students writing assessments from K-7 are passed through a portfolio system from teacher to teacher, year to year until they reach high school.  Within these portfolios students are marked as either not yet meeting, minimally meeting, meeting or exceeding. These are paper writing assignments that are determined that year to provide a snapshot of a students ability and give the next teacher a “heads up” to see what level they are working with. Should the students writing be the benchmark that displays the level of literacy that a student is currently at.  Is perhaps multimodal literacy better suited as a way for students to construct, represent and present knowledge. Ong talks of “the shift from oral to written speech is essentially a shift from sound to visual space” (Ong, 1982, pg. 115). So now do we transfer from visual space to moving images?

Looking to Chandler who states “The bias in which writing is privileged over speech has been called graphocentrism or scriptism. In many literate cultures, text has a higher status than speech: written language is often seen as the standard” (Chandler, 1995, “Conclusion” para.1).  Just as oral has been seen as a lower form of communication than writing, currently video and multi-media is being denied as a dominant form of communication within our school system. Why do we create assessment practices that look at physical pen and paper written work over multimedia presentations for our students yearly capstone projects.  Their is no denying that writing is and always will be a vital skill to practice and perfect but is it still a relevant form of expression to assess our students. These digital natives have been raised in a digitally drenched climate where writing is gradually disappearing and being replaced by new forms of expression.

In our current world how do students communicate with each other and with their environment outside the school? It certainly is not through written expression but rather through multiple digital tools.  Lim looks at “specific semiotic resources (e.g. language, gesture, images) co-deployed across various modalities (e.g. visual, aural, somatic), as well as their interaction and integration in constructing a coherent text.” (Lim, 2015, pg. 917) What needs to be passed onto the next teacher is a snapshot of the students literacy across a broad spectrum.  Reluctant writers can deliver amazing videos that show creativity, imagination and an ability display “above expectations” on multimodal texts.

It is here where I agree with Chandler that “writing is no ‘better’ than speech, nor vice versa – speech and writing need to be acknowledged as different media with differing functions.(Chandler, 1995, “Conclusion” para.9).  Within this I would add students ability to create multi media such as slides, infographics, animations and video as a forms of literacy competence. We need to be weave these practices into our current outdated assessment tools.  Our sequence and scope of how we assess our students ability to communicate in a rapidly evolving digital landscape needs a drastic overhaul and while writing is an important part of literacy it is not the only form of expression.

 

                                                              References

Chandler, Daniel. (1995) Biases of the Eye an Ear. Daniel Chandler’s Homepage. Retrieved May 30, 2018 from http://visualmemory.co.uk/daniel/Documents/litoral/litoral1.html

Chandler, Daniel. (1995) Technological and Media Determinism. Daniel Chandler’s Homepage.  Retrieved May30, 2018 from http://www.aber.ac.uk/media/Documents/tecdet

Lim, F. V. , K.L. O’Halloran, S. Tan and M.K.L. E (2015: 917), ‘Teaching Visual Texts with Multimodal Analysis Software’, Educational Technology Research and Development 63(6), 915–935.

Ong, W. (1982.) Orality and literacy: The technologizing of the word. London: Methuen.

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