Sunday, November 08, 2009

Digital Literacy

My English 1 Composition students are creating a web-based research project. I'm finding that many students lack digital skills as well as research skills, so that has me thinking about a huge gap we may have in curriculum. Here is a list of skills that Maria Andersen suggested as necessary in her blog, Teaching College Math



Basic Web Stuff
1. Basics of HTML (bold, underline, italics, special characters)
2. How to use EMBED code or make a live link
3. How to make and share a screenshot
4. How to make and share a short video explaining something or asking for help
5. Learn basic abbreviations and emoticons (e.g. ROFL, IMHO)
6. How to build a landing page for your web-based stuff (e.g. iGoogle, NetVibes)
7. How to add gadgets or plug-ins for various sites
8. How to make a simple website (e.g. Google Sites)
9. Build a clickable resume / digital portfolio
10. How (and when) to use collaborative documents or spreadsheets
11. How (and why) to create tags and labels
12. How (and why) to use URL-shortening sites (e.g. TinyURL)
Organization
13. How to set up a web-based calendar and use it to manage your time
14. How to set up and manage an RSS reader
15. How to find a common meeting time (e.g. Doodle)
16. How to set up a communication aggregator (e.g. Digsby, Trillian, TweetDeck)
Communication
17. How to manage email
18. How to write a good “first-contact” email
19. How to write a good subject line
20. How to write a good email response
21. Texting etiquette (when it’s appropriate, when it’s not)
22. How to summarize your thoughts in 140 characters or less
23. How to use Twitter (reply, retweet, direct message)
24. How to determine whether you should share it in a public forum (will it affect your future job prospects, your current employment, etc.)
25. How to manage an online meeting
26. How to give an effective webinar
27. What are the differences between various social networks and how they are used? (e.g. Facebook, Ning, LinkedIn)
Finding and Managing Information
28. How to use web-based bookmarks
29. How (and when) to use library search databases
30. How (and when) to use an image-based search engine
31. How (and when) to use alternate search engines (e.g. Clusty)
32. Who writes Wikipedia articles and when can they be trusted?
33. How to build a custom search engine
34. When can you trust the information you find?
35. How to use article citations to find better references
36. How to manage a bibliography online (e.g. Zotero)
37. How to set up web alerts to track new information (e.g. Google Alerts)
Privacy, Security, and the Law
38. Creative Commons – what is it and how to choose appropriate license?
39. How to read the legalese that tells you who owns it after it is shared online
40. What should you share and how does that change for different audiences?
41. How to manage usernames & passwords
42. How to find and tweak the privacy settings in common social networking sites (e.g. Facebook, MySpace, and Twitter)
43. How do data-mining sites get your information? (e.g. participating in FB quizzes)
44. What are the security concerns with GPS-based tracking systems?
Presentation
45. How to determine the audience and appropriate length for your presentation
46. Good presentation design principles
47. Principles of storytelling
48. How to share a set of slides on the Internet
49. How to build a non-linear presentation
50. How to build a flashy presentation (and when to use it)
51. How to find high-quality images that can be used in presentations (with appropriate copyrights)
52. How to find audio that can be shared in a presentation (with appropriate copyrights)
53. How to create a captioning script for a video
54. Ways to caption an internet-based video
55. How (and when) to use a virtual magnifier with your presentation
Ways to Learn
56. How to build an interactive mindmap to organize ideas
57. How to use a blog to track your learning process
58. How to find good sites, blogs, and other online publications for the topic you are learning about
59. How to cultivate a personal learning network (PLN)
60. How to participate in a live learning chat (e.g. TweetChats)

All of this makes me think about cars.

When they were first invented, lots of people understood the rudiments of how they worked and could make simple repairs.  As they became more technologically advanced (and arguably more dependable), there was less need to understand the inner workings--put in a little gas, run it through the jiffy-lube once in a while and go.   Generations born long after the advent of the automobile thought less about how it worked and just used their cars.

Perhaps the same will be true with computer technology.  Those of us born before computers and who were interested enough in them, learned BASIC and DOS and figured out how to tinker when things didn't work.  When the web was born, we learned enough HTML to be dangerous and gladly gave it up for web editing programs.  But all those experiences gave us a shade-tree mechanic's perspective about working in a digital age.

My students, on the other hand, just want to turn on the machine and have it GO.  There is not much interest in learning how to make a web page, how to get under the hood and tinker.  Case in point, when a student raised the question about how to create the basic web page for their projects, I found that almost none of them had created one from scratch, but almost ALL of them had either a blog of a Facebook page on which they happily created a web presence without knowing it.

Thinking about Maria's list, I wonder if we can teach the concepts quickly enough as the technological landscape continuously shifts underneath us.  And I wonder if these concepts will even be relevant in another two years.

1 comment:

  1. I love the comparison to tinkering with cars. Also reminded me of my uncle. When Westinghouse closed down, he went back to school to learn about computers. Rather than learning how to actually USE them, he learned the inner workings of them. He was one of those mechanical-minded men, but after the classes, though he knew how to break one down and put it back together, he was barely literate when he came to web navigation or even email. Oddly, he had by this time stopped changing the oil in his truck and opted for a quicklube!

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