Keywords: linking testing storytlr
Posted by Sian Bayne | 0 comment(s)
I liked this paper's no-nonsense approach (and it was written in a style I could access easily). Several good bits of content:-
From the paper:-
The essence of the challenge for all educators in the 21st century is to get the learners to:-
The aim is to promote the free-flow of information and ideas in the interest of all and to promote a thriving culture, economy and democracy.
Information Literacy is the ability to deal with complexities of the current information environment - it must
So much e-learning remains as e-teaching (the provision of lecture material online) - is this due to poor information literacies amonst the tutors?
The "information literate" are those who know when they need information and are able to identify, locate, evaluate, organise and effectively use the information to address and resolve problems
The Australian Information Literacy Standards
An information literate individual has learned how to learn and is able to:-
Keywords: information literacies technology fluency Bundy
Posted by Andrew Miller | 0 comment(s)
I sorry but I found this paper rather dull although it did contain some little gems of information I could use.
Firstly, Barrett attests that most graduates did not have a clear sense of their research aims at the start of the process - they fumbled about and were guided by colleagues, tutors and supervisors. This is so good to hear as I am usually in the same boat. The important thing here is that this is probably when most of the searching of libraries and whatnot occurs - so that searching can at bet be unfocussed and at worst be blind fishing. Without good IL skills the period of fuzziness is probably an awful lot longer than it needs to be.
The second little gem was that most students lack personal collections and substantial subject expertise. Again, I thought I was alone but so many people I have spoken to lack a personal collection or just have haphazard piles of documents in cupboards or piled on desks. From this knowledge I feel I can make best use of the web-based personal catalogues offered by del.icio.us, Connotea, Furl It, Zimbio and the like. All the tools are there - we just don't use them. I shall catalogue all my piles of paper.
Keywords: information literacies seeking catalogues
Posted by Andrew Miller | 0 comment(s)
Hellfire!
What a paper to start us off on! It was like pulling teeth but I got there in the end I think. A good (content) opener for the course as it provided so much food for thought.
Intertextuality has to exist otherwise we would have to write everything de novo each time - scientific advances would be limited to the lifespan of any one scientist.
Newspapers of ten translate the "official" laguage of politicians and the like into the vocabulary of the the day-to-day spoken word (or rather the newspaper's interpretation of the spoken word). Why do they have to do this? Is it that "official" language is not digestable by the masses or are we losing the ability to understand "proper" vocabulary? I fear I do not know the answer to this!
From the paper:-
Many non-commodity institutions are being drawn more and more into the commodity model and the matrix of consumerism - they are under pressure to "package" their "commodities" and "sell" them to "consumers".
Presuppositions (based on prior texts of the text-producers or by other texts) can be manipulative as well as sincere - they are a good way of manipulating people as they are very difficult to challenge.
A genre is not only a particular text type but a particular process of producing, distributing and consuming that text
A discourse is a particular way of constructing a subject matter. E.g. Medicine is an area of knowledge constructed from a technological and scientific perspective unlike that of "alternative medicine"
Keywords: language culture communication intertextuality fairclough
Posted by Andrew Miller | 0 comment(s)
Although this paper was a good read I do feel that it took an awfully long time to say not a lot.
Reading the paper did improve my understanding of sequential and cultural contexts in speech utterances and the importance of considering these when analysing dialogues.
Understanding the relationships between conversation participants helps understand the conversation through analysing the dialogue - are the participants on an equal footing or does one have some sort of superiority over another? This would change the giving and receiving of an utterance.
From the paper:-
There is no point looking at a single utterance without considering their place in the local sequence of utterances and there is no point just looking at their sequential place if the contextual details are available. Contextual knowledge is a luxury though
The analyst must know the cultural as well as the sequential rules for the use of certain utterances to correctly analyse the dialogue
Keywords: language culture communication context sequential McHoul Rapley Antaki
Posted by Andrew Miller | 0 comment(s)
I enjoyed this paper a lot more than I thought I would - although it got a bit techie in some areas I think I got a lot ot of it - mainly the highlighting that any discourse is a product of its participants. Those participants bring to that discourse their own expectations and histories, what had led them to have tose expectations, and external influences such as institutional / social policies and discourses.
Reading this paper has made me quite excited about doing some actual discourse analysis. I know I've got a lot more reading to do first but I think I'm starting to understand the complexity of the subject and intend to have a fisrt bash at things quite soon - I think I'll record one of my sessions at work next week and see what I can do about analysing it.
Good things I got from the paper - the actual process
Analysis of the teacher-pupil discourse
Analysing the teacher's intentions within the discourse
Alignment of teacher's intentions with policy / institutional discourse
So much food for thought!
Keywords: language culture communication discourse analysis black classroom
Posted by Andrew Miller | 0 comment(s)
I ended up quite disappointed with this paper - it started out quite well and then just sort of fizzled out and I'm not sure that the so-called paradoxes were paradoxical enough to write a peper on them. I feel that they are more like "considerations" than bases.
The best part of this paper for me was the discussion about the over-romanticising of the idea that the provision of material will overcome the digital divide in some sort of magic way - it will, prpobably, actually increase the divide. You can lead a horse to water but you can't make it drink! Also, so much of the world don't have the basic access so providing them with more things they can't access with help not one jot!
I did like the idea of not just throwing away the old traditional literacies though - use them as building blocks and as an access to the digital / information literacies required in a digital future.
From the paper:-
Does the possession of multimedia literacy or the lack of it create a new divide between those who have it and those who don't? Will it make those who do not have the literacies into passive consumers of pre-packaged information?
What is the relationship between traditional literacies and the new multimedia literacies? This question needs to be addressed if those with weaker IL skills are not to be left behind / out
Competence in traditional literacies are often the gateway into new literacies.
"We strive towards post-industrial forms of knowledge acquisition" - I hate this comment! It makes us sound as if we have been languishing in some sort of knowledge-poor Dark Age and the industrial age has been over for about 50 years or so - comments like this are way too late!
Keywords: digital literacy information wauschauer future
Posted by Andrew Miller | 0 comment(s)
Wow!
I'm impressed with the speed this site was set up. It's great that it contains all of the functions that Eduspaces had too as I really liked that site.
Here's looking forward to a new term - making some new friends and reacquainting with some old ones (if thirteen weeks could be considered old)
Have a great term eveybody!
Posted by Andrew Miller | 0 comment(s)
Posted by Sian Bayne | 2 comment(s)