1.
How has the nature of literacy changed as a result of digital technologies?
Literacy, no longer
confined to communication through reading and writing of traditional printed
text, has expanded and figuratively exploded, particularly within the past
decade. For educators and students, it’s here—technology. I continually
struggle with the tension between the restrictive culture of political mandates
that value traditional approaches to literacy and how I continually work to
develop a culture of possibilities that engage and build upon the new
literacies that students bring with them to class daily. Today make literacy
more relevant to students while creating space in the English language arts
classroom both for teachers and students alike to explore, compose, and share a
range of texts with larger audiences. Further, when we keep such questions in
mind, we can create multidimensional curricula that reach more populations in
ways that we could not otherwise. We know that when people are actively engaged
with inquiry, have a desire to learn new things, and try out different digital,
visual, musical, spatial, dramatic (and so on) tools and techniques, they have
the potential to say and do things that we have never before imagined.Change in literacy
2.
What are the benefits of multimodal reading and writing for students?
Research has shown the multifaceted ways in which languages (art, drama,
music, movement, written/oral, math) can be studied in school. It has been substantiated
that students of all ages learn best
when engaged .But to be successful the strategies need to be socially constructed,
personally relevant, creative composition and interpretation of texts that
incorporate a variety of meaningful communicative modes or symbol systems. Working
with multimodal literacies is an essentially interactive and flexible, dynamic
and integrative, social and cultural practice that cannot be reduced to
anything less.
3.
What project described intrigued you the most?
I
found two studies, in particular, demonstrated how the inclusion of drama in
the reading
curriculum
improved students’ comprehension and the teacher’s use of effective
instructional practices to support reading (Rose etal., 2000; Wolf, 1998). Saying
‘Yes’ to Music: Integrating Opera into
a
Literature Study,” Sharon Blecher and Gail Burton describe the integral role
music plays in their first- and second-grade curricula. They demonstrate how
music frames their school day, enhances children’s understanding of story,
specifically fairy tales, and enables children to engage in authentic musical
and literary inquiry .In this chapter, readers see how drama, visual arts,
music, and the genre of fairy tales were integrated to help children broaden their
thinking and extend the possibilities for learning in unique and phenomenal
ways. Chapter 4, Esther Gray and Susan Thetard present their research investigating
how Susan’s high school students express the complexities of the Holocaust
through process drama and writing in role.
Gray and Thetard describe how they carefully designed contexts to discourage students from
oversimplifying the
events or from resorting to mere tragedy narratives. Findings f rom the data
illuminate the ethics and insights students gained about the Holocaust-era and
about themselves as actors. This chapter raises important points related to
critical literacy and identifies key considerations for teachers who plan to
implement drama
in their own literacy classrooms.
Interestingly, when I was in 7th
grade , 1964, my English Lit. teacher had us act out our book reports. We did
not just read, this made us more aware of what we were reading. But we read
books paper and print, nothing on line. When my children were in kindergarten (1977)
their teachers read their fairy tales to music and incorporated dance. My
daughter loved it , my son hated it. Go figure. What I find interesting is today,
it is made out to be a new way to engage students.
4.
What challenge to integrating mulitmodal reading and writing into schools do
you most identify with?
There are many challenges that I can
identify. Although I try to become multimodal savvy, I take the risk and try to
move outside of my comfort zone. But many classes are led by , more talented than
I, weavers of multimodal curricula or by teachers who collaborated with
researchers or colleagues. But more significant is that, I teach what I know
best, what I am most comfortable with, and what I enjoy. A teacher’s comfort
level with his or her own artistic abilities or technological skills can be one
of the biggest deterrents to implementing multimodal literacies instruction,
which I strongly agree. Because I am not
from the techno generation, it is like going to a foreign country without
knowing the language and trying to get around one word at a time. The students
today are practically born with an iphone in their hand and I’m still trying to
figure out the VCR. Actually I can set the time now.
The final project for this course will be to design a multi-modal activity for use with your students! Hopefully this will help elevate your comfort level with mulit-modal learning!
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