ETEC540: The changing spaces of reading and writing.

Grand Theft Education — Harper’s takes on educational gaming and emergent narrative

I doubt the piece will appear online, but the latest issue of Harper’s features a fairly extensive and often compelling discussion on the rise of educational gaming:

Lesson plans are being adjusted accordingly.
Last year hundreds of new educational video games were released, on
subjects ranging from algebra to U.S. history. In order to assess the
video game’s pedagogical potential, but also its implications for the
English language, Harper’s Magazine brought together four experts — two
video-game enthusiasts and two teachers — and charged them with a task:
to dream up video games that might teach, of all things, writing.

Based on the title, and Harper’s general editorial bent (glimpsed in the “of all things, writing” quoted above), I was expecting a largely curmudgeonly treatment, but was pleasantly surprised that both of the “teachers” slated to defend the sanctity of the printed word seemed quite excited by the possibilities.

I’ll quote a few of my favorite exchanges below, in hopes of nudging a few people closer to the
newstand:

RAPH KOSTER: It’s long been known that brussels
sprouts are not as much fun as chocolate. As Mark Twain put it, “Work
consists of whatever a body is obliged to do. Play consists of whatever
a body is not obliged to do.”

JANE AVRICH: Right. Tom Sawyer gets the other kids to paint Aunt Polly’s fence by turning it into play.

KOSTER:
It’s very important to set up that context. In the video-game world,
this is called the “magic circle” surrounding games. And it has to be a
circle of no consequence: What you’re doing in here doesn’t matter
outside it, so it’s okay to fail. You’re forgiven. One of the problems
with standard pedagogy is that it all matters too much, there’s a
pressure to succeed. And that turns off a lot of learners. Pressure
situations are difficult for some people.

BILL WASIK: So zombies it is. Presumably, as students go along in the game the words will get more difficult? The zombies wilier?

STEVEN JOHNSON:
All good games start off relatively simple and they get more and more
challenging. The learning is what keeps you roped in: Wow, it got a
little bit harder, but I’ve gotten a little bit better.

I particularly enjoyed the following exchange, if only because it served to reinforce a niggling suspicion I’ve been harbouring about one of my current guilty pleasures:

AVRICH: My friend Griffin suggested an idea
for a game to teach writing. I thought it was very clever, considering
that he’s ten. He said, “What about a detective game, with questions
and real clues?” Such a game would involve finding patterns and
discovering evidence. It could be a great way to learn narrative.

WASIK: Could you modify a game like that to include real reading?

AVRICH:
Yes, my idea would basically be a hybrid. In order to move to the next
phase of the game, you would have to read literary texts and answer
questions about them. The questions would grow more difficult,
detailed, and arcane, and the answers would create a pattern, a text
within a text. The text, a unique story determined by the player, would
ultimately lead you to the goal of your quest: the secret scrolls of
Atlantis, for example, or the buried wing of the library of Alexandria.

But
within this frame mystery would be the mysteries of the English
language, everything from basic rules of grammar to the obscure
etymology of words-this word is Greek, this is from the old French,
this is Arabic, and so on. Our language is full of historical and
cultural riddles. Drama too: the conquests that transformed it could
provide great visuals. A magician-mentor figure could guide you back in
time to show you through the different eras: the Druids and the Romans,
the Angles and the Saxons, William the Conqueror and William
Shakespeare.

KOSTER: That’s a great idea. Have you heard of alternate-reality gaming?

AVRICH: I don’t think so, no.

KOSTER:
It’s a relatively new genre of game, in which the play links up with
the real world in some way. The first well-known one was actually made
as a promotional campaign for Ai, the Spielberg/Kubrick movie. In the
credits at the bottom of the movie poster, a woman was credited as the
film’s “Sentient Machine Therapist.” People who saw it knew that it had
to be fake, but when they searched for the woman’s name online, they
found academic papers by her, websites that cited her. The more they
dug, the more they found, and they had to keep up this exercise in
close reading. Eventually they found their way to phone numbers,
meeting places. In the end, many hundreds of players wound up playing
this game to figure out the hidden history. The game you’re describing
sounds a lot like that. It’s an exercise in a form of literacy.

AVRICH:
That’s the idea-to create a really great mystery story within the game,
but where the reading supplements would be bits of actual literature.

KOSTER:
I hate to make the analogy, but I also think the appeal would be very
similar to that of The Da Vinci Code. Which is a very gamelike book,
right?

AVRICH: Yes, that’s true. The protagonists solve a series of riddles in order to move from level to level.

JOHNSON:
One of the signs of how important gaming is now, I think, is that video
games have started to influence our ideas of narrative, as opposed to
the other way around. The best example of this is the television show
Lost, this huge hit that is in some ways trying to build a television
show structured like a video game. The show has all these little clues
that you can only see if you freeze-frame on your TiVo.

KOSTER:
Lost has run its own alternate-reality game, in fact. During its first
season, in 2004, the show ran television commercials for a fictitious
airline-what was it, Oceanic?

JOHNSON: Oceanic Airlines, yes.

KOSTER: And viewers could visit this airline’s website and find hidden details about the show.

JOHNSON:
As with video games, there are hint guides to Lost that have been
created by fans online, all these fans with way too much time on their
hands.

AVRICH: I have to admit, I love Lost. I’ve actually had
conversations about Lost with my students that have turned into
discussions of reading skills.

None of the preceding will be too mind-blowing to a regular reader of Infocult, but speaking for myself this relatively simplified treatment helped me to get a tighter grip on some conceptual strands that are ceaselessly pulling apart in my own thoughts.

And at the risk of busting all manner of good faith fair use limits on quotation, I can’t resist pointing at the concluding thoughts:

AVRICH: My concern, really, is for
language. Which I fear is becoming more uniform, more practical, less
grammatical, less edited, and more bland.

KOSTER: What we mean by
literacy is changing. If you look at books like The Da Vinci Code, a
lot of what it does is appropriation-of a painting, or a historical
text-and annotation, with this whole cottage industry of providing the
footnotes: the TV specials, the books. To me, there’s a question
hanging over our conversation, which is: What kind of writing do we
hope to teach? We might like to teach kids to write like Proust, but no
one writes like Proust anymore. Appropriation and annotation are
becoming our new forms of literacy. Think of blogs, for example: most
blog posts are reblogs, they’re parasitic on things other people have
written. It’s a democratized writing, a democratized literacy.

THOMAS ZENGOTITA:
This plays into the virtual revolution I was describing earlier.
Everyone in the overdeveloped world will have the took they need to
create this amazing stuff, whether it be blogs or films or games. None
of it will rise to the peaks that we associate with names like Joyce or
Proust, but a great deal of it will be fantastic. And there will be so
much of it that it will inevitably divide into niches, into small
groups devoted to the art that they are making. In a way it’s the
fulfillment of an ancient dream. Everyone can have a creative life and
a meaningful dialogue with the culture. Everyone will be an artist, but
the price is that no one will be a great artist. There will no longer
be a place for such a being.

I mostly agree with these conclusions, though remain unconvinced that new media precludes the rise of genius. It all seems a little too mathematically tight to satisfy me. Elsewhere, the participants seem to find consensus around the notion that new media forms are fine for iterative plot development, but that they can’t do interiority as well as traditional literature. In Koster’s words “All nuance is lost in games. They are intrinsically and irredeemably formal in nature.”

I suppose he oughta know. But aren’t we in a very early stage in the development of these forms? Maybe somewhere — either within an individual of Shakespearean scope and power or in a hive of complementary souls — there lurks a transformative creative act that will transcend such limits?

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August 29, 2006   No Comments

Why teach digital writing?

A nifty overview of the necessity, the resistance to, and the process of teaching writing in networked digital environments.

Computers are not “just tools” for writing. Networked computers create a new kind of writing space that changes the writing process and the basic rhetorical dynamic between writers and readers. Computer technologies have changed the processes, products, and contexts for writing in dramatic ways—and rhetoric theory, composition practice, and writing instruction all need to change to suit how writing is produced in digital spaces.popup
Writing is radically changed by internetworked computer technology. Everybody says that—and researchers in the field of computers and writing have been exploring the implications of this claim for 20 years. But are we really REALLY ready to accept the implications of that claim, even some rather disturbing implications?

The conclusions strike me as persuasive, but they would, wouldn’t they?:

We have anchored digital writing practices to the extension of modes and media, and to the fact that writing, today, means much more than working merely with alphabetic text or with print pages, but that computer applications and digital publishing spaces allow us to weave and orchestrate multiple sign technologies (e.g., images, voice and other sounds, music, video, print, graphics), layered together across space and time to produce artifacts that can be interactive, hyperlinked, and quite powerful.
Fostering, supporting, and enhancing students’ abilities to write within and across digital spaces is complicated by a matrix of media, of rhetorics, of technologies, and of various institutional values. All of these variables and values create the shape of the context for digital writing. Digital writing makes visible needs that writing courses and curricula and programs that we haven’t previously articulated, or needed to articulate. These needs complicate and extend the pressures we already feel and that we already exert—perils and possibilities related to teaching and working spaces, evaluation, class size, access to computer labs, access to wireless teaching spaces, design of curricula, staffing and labor, and more. Many more.

The piece itself is a pretty good hybrid of traditional scholarly discourse and online techniques — be sure to click some of the ‘s…
Via morgan’s log

November 16, 2005   No Comments

Attack of the career-killing blogs…

I somehow made it to this point in my life without knowing what memeorandum was — my first glance turned up this new article on the career implications of academic blogging:

On the one hand, some resistance to the proliferation of blogs is understandable. The value of academic culture is that it stands apart from the ephemeral marketplace. Universities are by their very nature culturally conservative and slow to change. The odd situation would actually have been if universities had automatically embraced blogging. Holbo suggests that from one perspective, blogging is an affront to the traditional idea of the university. “You want to graft this onto the last living medieval guild system?” he imagines a senior scholar protesting.
But in another sense, academic blogging represents the fruition, not a betrayal, of the university’s ideals. One might argue that blogging is in fact the very embodiment of what the political philosopher Michael Oakshott once called “The Conversation of Mankind”—an endless, thoroughly democratic dialogue about the best ideas and artifacts of our culture. Drezner’s blog, for example, is hardly of the “This is what I did today …” variety. Rather, he usually writes about globalization and political economy—the very subjects on which he publishes in prestigious, peer-reviewed presses and journals. If his prose style in the blog is more engaging than that of the typical academic’s, the thinking behind it is no less rigorous or intelligent.
To take only one other example, John Hawks, an assistant anthropology professor at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, posts three to five essays a week on subjects like evolutionary theory. He writes about science with the breadth of the late Stephen Jay Gould and doesn’t see a big difference between most of his online and offline output. “Much of what I write online is scholarly. When I review an issue in human evolution, it is a genuine review. If I criticize something, I back it up,” he says. Indeed, his essays are festooned with citations.
So, might blogging be subversive precisely because it makes real the very vision of intellectual life that the university has never managed to achieve?

Also features a good overview of peer review issues, of both weblogs and scholarly work.

November 16, 2005   No Comments

Digital text conundrum

From a posting made yesterday by Tim Bray:

Here’s a puzzle: what’s the oldest electronic text? Let’s qualify that a bit, stipulating that the text should be substantial in size and essentially unchanged since first committed to bits. I suggest that when this artifact is identified, a paper version should be produced, to ensure that we don’t lose an important piece of our heritage. ¶

If you have nominations for this designation, post them in the comments field below.

October 7, 2005   1 Comment

Nitpicking Wikipedia’s Vulnerabilities

Most of you have likely heard about wikipedia by now (and perhaps even cited it in your research)! Over on Slashdot there is an interesting question about wikipedia that has a number of links to questionable practices in other forums for scholarship like peer-reviewed journals, conference papers, etc., followed by a group of techno-geeks offering their impressions of the value and worth of wikipedia. We’ll be taking a closer look at phenomena like wikipedia in Module 4, so some of the points and controversies here might be of interest to the group.
Be warned, Slashdot is not always the most polite of communities (though they are extremely resourceful!).

[Read more →]

October 6, 2005   3 Comments

Live, syncronous text editing…

For some time, I’ve been pining for a cross-platform version of SubEthaEdit. MoonEdit did not seem to catch fire, but recently a few new services like JotSpot Live and Writely have popped up.
Now, what Roland describes as an “open source SubEthaEdit for Perl and PHP” — SynchroEdit:

SynchroEdit is a browser-based simultaneous multiuser editor, a form of same-time, different-place groupware. It allows multiple users to edit a single web-based document at the same time, and it continuously synchronizes all changes so that users always have the same version.
SynchroEdit’s main editor is fully WYSIWYG, dynamically displaying bolds, italics, underlines, strikethroughs, with various justifications, indents and listing styles as an author inputs them. SynchroEdit also supports a simple, text-only editor for more basic documents. To clarify the multiuser experience, the editor window clearly depicts every user’s changes in a specific color and also marks where each user is currently editing with a colored flag listing the user’s name.

Still early days, but this space is heating up. I’ve had a number of instructors ask me about tools with just this functionality — I think we’re going to be having some live-text swingin’parties very soon.

October 6, 2005   No Comments

Sledge Hammer Keyboard

We’ll be looking at the development of technologies for Writing in Module 3, but you might be happy to know that you are not required to use this particular keyboard to compose your thoughts in the course. I wonder how such an input device would change the type of conversations we’d have the strength to write?!
http://www.taylorhokanson.com/work/sledge/page1.html

September 29, 2005   No Comments

Blog primer for writing teachers

Blogs, A Primer by Barclay Barrios is an excellent hypertext article appearing in the Spring 2005 online version of Computers and Composition. It addresses two main themes, one is the nature of online writing and scholarship, and the second in a guide to blogs for writing teachers.
While there is a lot of info about blogs out there, I liked this article for its one-stop shoppingness (and it’s lovely wallpaper!)
– Bonnie

September 24, 2005   No Comments

The Digital Darkage

Ever worry about how secure your data is sitting on optical or magnetic media, or whether or not 10 years from now, you’ll be able to listen to your “Earth, Wind and Fire” mp3 rips when that format no longer exists?
Perhaps we should all worry about these things a little bit. Check out this article from the Sydney Morning Herald. I place my bets on clay tablets, myself.
http://www.smh.com.au/news/technology/the-digital-dark-age/2005/09/22/1126982184206.html

September 23, 2005   No Comments

Turning the Pages – Online Gallery at the British Library

The British Library has a wonderful collection of books from their collection scanned in and available for online page turning (not scrolling). Take a look as they’ve developed a very nice interface designed to replicate codex experiences. Well, without the musty smell, that is!
http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/ttp/ttpbooks.html

September 22, 2005   No Comments