These are the notes for a talk I gave at Emory University, for their Symposium on Digital Publication, Undergraduate Research, and Writing in January 2013.
3. Help students understand the
relevance of digital literacy
Forget what youâve heard about
so-called "digital nativesâ
Don't worry about your own level
of digital literacy
4. Start small
Scaffold digital activities to help
students build confidence
Allow enough time to account for
technical difficulties
Try composing in digital genres yourself
first, when possible
5. Encourage students to use "everyday"
digital tools
Recommend a range of digital tools for
specific projects and provide help links
Support students using your expertise in
writing and rhetoric, not tech support
6. Give students opportunities for low-stakes
"play" with digital composing tools
Create online communities for students
across multiple classes to engage with
each other
Provide an online showcase for strongest
examples of student work
11. Discuss the changing nature of literacy
Engage in rhetorical analyses of digital
compositions
Experiment with current and emerging
technologies for research, reading, and
writing
12. Rhetorical Analysis
Study the ⢠Blogs, wikis, or
rhetorical forums on
practices of an relevant topics
online discourse ⢠Discussions on
community Wikipedia pages
13. Rhetorical Analysis
Study rhetorical ⢠What is the
rhetorical purpose
principles for of interface design?
web and ⢠How do
interface navigational
design elements impact
readers?
16. Technologies of Writing
Experiment with ⢠Social
tools that bookmarking
enhance reading, ⢠Google Docs
⢠Evernote
writing, research, ⢠Annotation
collaboration, tools (Word,
and peer review PDF)
17. Google Docs
âcommentâ feature
Diigo
highlighter &
sticky notes
18. Technologies of Writing
⢠Blogs
Experiment with ⢠Wikis
different ⢠Web site
builders
platforms for ⢠Social media
web publishing ⢠Prezi
⢠Glogster
20. Contribute to existing blog, wiki, forum, or
other digital environment
⢠Edit or compose a new wikiHow article
⢠Edit a Wikipedia entry
⢠Enter a forum conversation and inspire a
response
⢠Make strategic use of social media (Twitter,
Facebook, etc.)
21. Build a blog, wiki, or web site individually,
in groups, or as a class
⢠Create or redesign a web site for a service
learning partner, to raise awareness about
an issue, to showcase research, etc.
⢠Work collaboratively with students in other
sections of the same class (or in class taught
by other faculty members)
26. Audio and Photo Essays
⢠âThis I Believeâ exploratory essay
⢠Personal narrative (audio only or
with photo slideshow)
27. Video projects
⢠Public service announcement
⢠Animations
⢠Digital storytelling
⢠Flash talks
⢠Interviews
⢠Mini-documentary research video
⢠Episode commentary or scene analysis
⢠Strategic remix of digital media content
29. Sample animation to explore an insight inspired
by research (made with Xtranormal
30. Re-mediation
⢠Composing the same message in multiple
modalities to study how the message
changes
Presentations
⢠Stand-alone PowerPoint or Prezi with
text, images, and video
36. Meets established goals of writing instruction
Composing processes
Rhetorical knowledge
Critical thinking
Discourse conventions
Goals established by WPA, NCTE, CCC, and CCHE
37. Goal: Composing Processes
As readers in digital environments:
⢠Students can more easily view how ideas emerge through a
process of conversation and refinement
As writers:
⢠Response from real world audiences leads to desire to
revise
⢠Digital media composition requires a multi-step process
⢠Canât produce a rhetorically powerful digital composition
project the night before!
⢠Requires planning, research, collaboration, problem-
solving, drafting, feedback, revision
38. Goal: Rhetorical Knowledge
As readers in digital environments:
⢠Easy availability of digital environments and
genres allows students to study how writers
respond to real rhetorical situations and employ
rhetorical strategies
As writers:
⢠Gives students opportunities to compose for real
audiences and purposes, using contemporary
genres and publishing platforms
39. Goal: Critical Thinking
As readers in digital environments:
⢠Allows us to study how arguments work in action:
types of evidence, persuasive strategies, impact on
readers, nature of dialogue and disagreement
As writers:
⢠Gain deeper insight into the rhetorical strategies and
appeals used in digital formats by composing in them
⢠As composers, students start to recognize subtle
strategies for establishing credibility and persuading
audiences
40. Goal: Discourse Conventions
As readers in digital environments:
⢠Reading digital texts helps to raise awareness of the
role of conventions in both print and digital genres
As writers:
⢠Gives students practice at adapting conventions based
on their target discourse community
⢠Provides insight into the purpose of conventions that
students often struggle with in print writing
⢠Structural elements, such as introductions, transitions,
âunitsâ of thought, coherent progression of ideas
41. Additional Benefits
Reinforces traditional writing skills
Improves digital literacy skills
Validates multimodal literacies
Inspires greater student engagement
Prepares students for the future of writing
42. Reinforces Traditional Writing Skills
In their research into the pedagogical benefits of digital
storytelling for college students, Oppermann and Coventry
(2011) found that:
Being asked to communicate in the ânew
languageâ of multimedia brings students a
greater awareness of the component parts of
traditional writing.
Digital storytelling helps students develop a
stronger voice and helps students more accurately
and firmly place themselves in relationship to the
arguments of others.
43. Improves Digital Literacy Skills
Todayâs college students donât have the digital literacy skills they
need to compete against todayâs high school students
⢠But many donât realize it, as theyâve been told theyâre âdigital
nativesâ
Digital composition projects enable students to:
⢠Identify deficiencies in their digital literacy skills
⢠Remedy them while working on a project they find meaningful
44. Validates Multimodal Literacy
Literacy researchers have long emphasized the value of multiple
modalities in human communication (text, sound, visuals)
⢠Age of print: printed text is easiest to produce and distribute
(multimedia is for pros only)
⢠Digital age: relatively easy and inexpensive to produce and
distribute text, audio, images, and video
Assigning multimodal composition projects validates the rhetorical
power of multiple modalities
45. Improves Student Engagement
Composing for real audiences and purposes inspires
greater investment
⢠Students have a genuine interest in conveying a
meaningful message
Relevance of assignments spurs greater effort
⢠Helps students see writing as having a legitimate
purpose beyond âterm papersâ
46. Opperman and Coventry (2011) found that digital composition
projects allow students to:
⢠work on authentic assignments
⢠develop their personal and academic voice
⢠represent knowledge to a community of learners
⢠receive situated feedback from their peers
Due to their affective involvement with this process and the
novelty effect of the medium, students are more engaged than
in traditional assignments.
47. Prepares Students for the Future of Writing
Today, elementary school students are producing multimedia
research projects
⢠What kind of research projects will they expect to do in
college?
⢠What kind of projects will employers expect all college
graduates to be capable of producing?
What will count as âgood communication skillsâ in the future?
48. Resources
Please feel free to make use of the tutorials
and other resources on digital composition
available here:
http://digitalwriting101.net
Select the Teaching Digital Writing tab to
view resources specifically for instructors.
Hinweis der Redaktion
instructor with the PWR since 1999Iâve been the digital composition expert there for many years, helping faculty individually, leading workshops and providing tutorials and other resourcestoday Iâll share with you some tips for teaching composition as well as a few common approaches to consider
- will start by sharing some tips Iâve collected over the years as I help faculty incorporate different aspects of digital composition into their classes
relevance to their academic, professional, and civic lives; students have been habituated to print culture as the place where âreal writingâ happenscontinually emphasize the relationship between digital composition and the other forms of communication theyâll engage inif you treat students like theyâre already digital natives, theyâll never reveal to you what they donât know how to dodigital literacy is an evolving skill: be willing to learn new things with your students (and show them how you learn)
start with what youâre most comfortable with or what seems easiest (blog or audio essay)donât start off with the glitzy video projectyou donât need to be proficient with the digital genres you assign, but you should be familiar with the kinds of rhetorical and composition choices students will need to make in each genredonât necessarily have to show students your practice attempts (I have lots of random digital projects about my dogs!)
part of the reason digital composition belongs in a writing class at all is that the tools to compose for the web and in digital media are now available for free to just about anyone with a computer; if a project requires more advanced software or technical skill, it might not belong in a writing classgive students a choice, but provide a range of options you already know are likely to be appropriate to your assignmentmake sure students know where to go for tech support, but I recommend against providing it because it may undermine your role as the writing instructor
will give some examples of tools you might play with in a moment, when I discuss digital literacy activitiesfor example, I set up a class blog thatâs used by students in three sections of the same course (two campus and one online)online showcase: gives students samples and also motivates them to produce âfeaturedâ work
this is the main web site for my upper division courses on the rhetoric of gender, sexuality, and new mediabest projects are featured heresite gets a lot of traffic, so students have a sense real audienceclass blogs are sub-sites of this one
Will now cover some common approaches to digital composition, some of which will be familiar to you but hopefully some will be new to you and helpful
Iâve organized approaches into these three categories and will say a bit more about each, with some examples
depending on their previous educational experiences, some students havenât really thought about the shift from print to digital literacyFrontline specials: Growing Up Online or Digital Nationlots of videos on the topicwill give some examples for each of the underlined items
how writing functions as a tool for conversation, and how knowledge emerges through conversationWikipedia discussion pages illuminate how knowledge is the product of conversations among experts, often with differing points of view
interface design is a form of âwritingâ â communicating with readers through visual cues; bad design is bad writinghelps students start to see how rhetorical analysis is relevant to all kinds of things
- why did they use a word for one button and an icon for the other? this is âbad writingâ (because itâs not attentive to the needs of the audience)
- most web sites follow standard conventions for layout and design for a rhetorical purpose: to make them reader friendly - when items are where readers are accustomed to finding them, they spend more time reading your content and less time trying to navigate- help students understand the rhetorical purpose of each element of the design (how readers will interact with the content)Identifying the conventions of web writing also helps students understand that different types of writing follows different conventions
Evernote is one among many tools that allow students to collect information and share it with others (syncs across multiple computers and devices)Comment tool in Word or PDF readers allows for markup of readings without needing to print them - example activity: upper division students annotate a PDF of an academic article to teach lower division students rhetorical strategies for reading them - students are often thrilled to learn they can take notes on articles for research papers
Google Docs (now Google Drive)create a folder, share it with all students, everything inside is also shared (all draft work is visible to class members only)students can upload drafts in any format (Word docs, slide presentations, images, audio, video, etc.)multiple students can comment on the same draftDiigo (a social bookmarking tool popular with educators)students can save links to the class group (link roll on class blog)can highlight anything they read on the webcan leave notes for themselves only, for class members, or for public
encourage a sense of exploration and play: how does this technology impact how I write?for example, how does Prezi change the way we read and compose presentations?new tools becoming available all the time; K-12 educators are good at discovering and writing about these
Defined as: writing in alphabetic text for distribution on the web or through social media
wikiHow article: first year students and technical communication loved that project- particularly proud to have âpublishedâ something on the webWikipedia has a whole section on projects for college classes - editing a Wikipedia page takes good rhetorical awareness (hard to get edits to âstickâ if the writing doesnât meet certain standards)how colleagues use forums and social media
lots of free, easy to use tools available. Best wiki site: wikispaces.com Best web site builder: weebly.com Best blog: Wordpress or Tumblrwikis can be good for collaborativeresearch projects (sample assignment: reviews or comparative analyses of digital tools for college students)I strongly recommend the value of a class blog, esp. across multiple sections
My WRTG 3020 students did primary research into messages about gender and sexuality conveyed in popular culture and presented their research in this wikiI installed a wiki engine called Dokuwiki on my own domain name
- Class blog for Fall 2012, shared by students across three sections of the same course.Students posted 767 original blog posts and 1,843 commentsclass blog powered by the custom version of Wordpress multisite
- Sample student research project published on Weebly- She did her own research, identified a need, then designed the web site to meet the needShe wrote all the text, created the structure, and also made all the imagesStudent not particularly digital, but ease of use of Weebly inspired her to try more
Goes by different names, but typically refers to composition that communicates through modes beyond alphabetic text (appeals to us through sight, sound, and so on)
âThis I believeâ activities available on the TIB web siteGreat place to start: easy shift from print-based writing to a form of digital writing (sound and voice become part of your communication strategies)
A favorite among my students is digital storytelling (a personal narrative accompanied by photos)relatively easy in terms of technical skillimmediately accessiblepotentially very powerful (esp. when exploring how they came to understand their gender and/or sexual orientation)draws on many of the same principles as print-based writing
PSA: mix of clips from movies, documentaries, and news stories along with facts and real stories about violence against transgender peopleAudio essay: explore how you came to understand your gender expression or identityThese can be embedded in a course blog or web site
- presentations certainly arenât new, but emphasize the concept of stand-alone (meant to be explored online, not as notes to accompany a live lecture)
Student research project on how transsexual people experience embodimentPrezi allows students to incorporate images and YouTube video clipsgood choice for stand-alone presentations because embedding digital media is easy
Consider how different visual formats impact the kinds of messages you can convey (what can you communicate in cartoon format that you canât write as text?)again, the reason to teach these in writing classes is that the tools for composing them are available to everyone nowAll my students compose one new header for the blog and have option to compose more for extra credit, which many do
- these are just 2 pages from a longer âgraphic short storyâ â short version of Graphic novel- works well for personal narrative or for raising awareness about an issue (like how parents and other adults inadvertently gender police children)
(from the Tufts web site)**** END AFTER NEXT SLIDE FOR EMORY PRESENTATION ***
The following slides show benefits in light of common goals for writing instruction
MY EXPERIENCEâwriting as a processâ is hard to teach, esp. the value of drafting, getting feedback, and revisingneed for process becomes much clearer with digital media projects (which also involve lots of traditional writing)
Again, the concept of enabling students to become producers, not just consumers - reflected in the NCTE goals for teaching writing and many other places- studentslearn the âinside scoopâ on how media messages persuadethatâs partly why we teach essay writing: give students the inside scoop on how knowledge is composedcanât really understand what you canât compose
STORY:Students engaged in digital media composition often âdiscoverâ the rhetorical purpose of conventions like transitionsarticle by professor whose students spent 20 minutes debating the rhetorical value of a particular transition in a video project - students often have intuitive understanding of the value of transitions in video projects - when we point out what theyâre doing with the video, students then say they finally âgetâ the point of using transitions in essays
âgreater awareness of component partsâ â for example, structural elements that help guide readersIn their research into the pedagogical benefits of digital storytelling for college students, Oppermann and Coventry (2011) found that:Being asked to communicate in the ânew languageâ of multimedia brings students a greater awareness of the component parts of traditional writing. Digital storytelling helps students develop a stronger voice and helps students more accurately and firmly place themselves in relationship to the arguments of others.
Support: I work closely with students on digital projects, and they often confess how little they know -every semester, I have at least one student who didnât know she could copy text from one app and paste it into another one - most have never done anything more than check Facebook, watch videos on YouTube, send email, and look up a few things on GoogleRegardless of the digital skills they may have learned in high school, by the time they get to my class, as juniors and seniors, theyâve been thoroughly conditioned to the demands of old school print literacyMany know the basics of navigating digital environments, but not how to participate in them
Enables students to move from consumers of multimodal content to producers
students who make projects for real audiences tend to work on them long after theyâre âdueâ
We owe it to students to help them develop writing skills of the future, not the writing skills of the pastHow will academic writing change in the future?
you can also find a link to my main web site here as well as my contact infohappy to add more help resources by request!