literacy

I have been watching kids who have a difficult time with technology. I teach in an impoverished school and watching those kids who are clueless when coming to a computer. I see many skills are lacking as compared to other students at school and with my own kids. As poorer children on average fail behind because there is no home-based preparations that are acquired through dialogue with parent, being read to frequently, and being exposed to a wide variety of experiences in the world. The digital gap becomes wider as these students struggle. I am a first hand witness to this and I am amazed. How far does the digital divide effect literacy in the age we live in?

Our students are at a loss with the complex language as learning becomes more and more abstract and specialized. Often times the student sees no relevance in figuring out language structure or study ancient civilization because they don’t see how it fits into their life as a teenager with their environment dictates other messages to them. The cause is a lack of comprehension of increasingly complex language. This become overwhelming evident when observing students researching using Internet resources or completing an activity where students have to use a digital tool like voice thread, blog, PowerPoint, or Word. I guess I am seeing a correlation between reading ability and tech skills. I can see how these students are lost in the classroom when teachers teaching in traditional ways about nouns, verbs, wars, geometry, invertebrates, etc. The language the teacher may use or the language they find in their text and handouts may seem foreign from their experiences in life. Students will limited vocabulary and language experience have trouble in classrooms where students have so little connection with the objective of the day.b

Attribution for image: http://flickr.com/photos/joriel/2360038974/

I received my September/October isse of Learning and Leading from ISTE and immediatley the article titled “Web 2.0 Today’s Technologies,Tomorrows Learning” grabbed my attention since I am reading the book by Solomon and Schrum Web 2.0 New Tools, New Schools. I was drawn to the role that digital games and simulations in our edcational environment and the role they are playing in some classrooms across the globe.  It happens when I am planning a hands-on gaming and literacy night with parents and students in February with the assistance of the Georgetown County Library System. Our county library system has received a grant to study the impacts gaming has on literacy, and they will be hiring a gaming expert to help the library sytem in this process.  The library system is sponsoring they workshop and providing an expert in this areal to lead the workshop. A few week ago I started my inquiry in this area.

The two authors of this article Groff and Haas are research associates at the MIT Education Arcade.  We are caught in a dilemma with students about them caught up in the disruptive influence of video games on their classrooms. We complain they are not reading and not learning. We hear constantly about the hours our kids are spending in virtual world and the heralded fear of what this might be doing to our kids. What we have neglected to do or what Groff and Haas dedicate research to studying the positive benefits or the potential benefits gaming and simulation can bring to the classroom. They are not alone in this study, but other follow suite around the world attempting to make games and procedures that can help bridge the gap between the traditional scholastic culture and the culture of learners today (Jennnifer & Jason, 2008).

Mark Prensky, an internationally acclaimed speaker, writer, consultant, and designer in the critical areas of education and learning, make a great point in his famous article Digital Native, Digital Immigrants about the impact of the digital world his having on our kids brains. Marc states that “it is highly unlikely the Digital Natives will go backwards. In the first place, it may be impossible - their brains may already be different “(from Digital Native, Digital Immigrants).  With that in mind, I find the article empowering to learn about something I don’t know a bunch about.  How does gaming and literacy mix?

My son has been an avid player of Sims City and War of the Worlds.  I have been amazed for several years what impact these games have had impact on his learning when comes to history of wars from the bible era to present and what he has learned about civics and economics from the games.

One thing we know about learning from brain research is that student learning takes place while they are immersed in real world authentic task.  This task has troubled educators for years in trying to accomplish such task, but the future is here now. Through gaming and simulations, we can involve them in real world situations that were not an option of the classroom. There were always time constraints, accessibility issues, and lacking of resources. We now have ways to explore the human circulatory system and many ways to provide analogies of real world situations. We have the ever-increasing ability to relate all this to the content of the classroom.

Graff and Haas provide classroom examples and website that need to be explored. They do give warning there are bumps in the road to overcome. There are issues with hardware and school networking systems.  They point out there is a steep learning curve as one explores the technology and actually implements in their classroom. Gaming and simulations are open ended and not teacher directed. Sometimes one can see the teacher may not know what is going on all the time in the virtual worlds.

I have much to learn about gaming and simulations. I have a lot to learn this year and plan to take advantage of what our county library system has to offer me and the students at my school. In the weeks to come I will be exploring this area of instructional technology. I welcome readers with their comments and suggestions.

Don’t miss this article!

Jennnifer, G., & Jason, H. (2008, September/October ). Web 2.0 today's tecnologies, tomorrow's learning. Learning and Leading with Technology , 12-15.

 

Last night I read this article from the NY Times called The Literacy Debate: Online, R U Really Reading? . I have spent the last 18 or more hours trying to make sense of it and often going back to the article and the comments that followed. Is reading on the Internet real reading? Should reading on the Internet be compared to reading a comic strip? Should reading on the Internet much the same as watching TV? Is reading from a book more significant than reading from the Internet? Is our whole society going to pots because of the amount of time our kids are spending on the Internet? Maybe! Maybe not!

I love reading a book especially a good fictional novel. I absolutely love the point where I am hooked and my conscious takes over. It is the point where I see and interact with the novel on a completely different level of consciousness. It is that moment when the video in my head takes over and I become overwhelmed as I live the plot with the characters but only peering into the story like a fly observing as she buzzes around the room. Reading novels helps us grasp the world by pursuing stories, symbols, analogies, metaphors, arguments — patterns of thought, some of them linear. The patterns always have their limitations, but they can illuminate aspects of the world if we pursue them far enough. Those patterns help us make sense of the world around us and help us see clearly through the murky dark.

I confess I read online a lot more than I did a year ago and I believe my reading will continue to increase online. Reading online helps me pursue my interest. Reading online allows me to interact with authors and others who make comments in reading. I can participate in discussions about news items that I find compelling (such as this one) and observe how popular certain articles are. There is no doubt that the Internet is enhancing literacy in terms of both writing and reading skills. One example is the open participation of ordinary people in the book reviews at Amazon.com and many others.

This approach has helped me to strengthen what I know about teaching, instructional technology, constructivist learning, and more. Reading and writing online has pushed me to pursue my inquiry at different levels, and I have learned more in this pursuit than I have in the graduate degree I will complete on Sunday. I have used reading on the Internet a tool for learning and staying informed.

I too confess I am reading a lot less books than I normally do even though I am reading two books now. This summer I only read two fictional books whereas most summers are spent reading fiction books. My interest this summer has changed, and I am more motivated to pursue topics of curiosity instead of my desire to be purely entertained from fiction.

I think books are wonderful and I worry that kids today will miss real reading in the terms of the experience many good readers have. There is nothing more entertaining than a good novel that captures my attention. I do not think reading on the Internet is evil, but I feel that our children and students need to learn how to read on the Internet. They still need to be taught to pursue great books. Great books make us stronger people. Great books help us grasp the world through stories, symbols, analogies, metaphors, arguments — patterns of thought, some of them linear. They teach us about the world and about the metaphors and analogies of life we have a difficult time figuring out on our own. Books help us figure out patterns that other people may have traveled and helps synthesis meaning into our own lives. Reading books has to stay near and dear to our hearts.

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