This document discusses the changing nature of literacy from the era of print to the current digital age. It explores how literacy has evolved from individual reading and writing to include multimedia communication skills. The key aspects of modern literacy outlined in the text include consuming, producing, and communicating across various media; consuming and sharing information; and developing life skills. Digital technologies have created an environment of ubiquitous connectivity that supports new forms of collaborative knowledge-building.
36. Partnership for
21st Century Skills
U.S. Department of Education
National Education Association
Nationally recognized businesses, such as:
AOL Time Warner Foundation
Apple Computer
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Dell Computer Corp.
Microsoft Corporation
37. 6 key elements of
21st century
learning
life skills
21st century content
core subjects
learning and thinking skills
information and communications technology literacy
authentic assessments
57. orality – literacy – 2nd orality
Oral Tradition Literacy A Second Orality
Collective Individual Connective
A Live Wire A Closed Circuit A Power Station
Personally experienced 'Objective' (distanced, reflected) Consensus and contingency
Synchronous Asynchronous Distributed presence
Persuasion through presence (intrinsic and peer Persuasion through logic and scientific method (external Persuasion through resilience and resonance (collective
authority) authority) authority)
Authority through relationship Authority through citation Authority through continuing interaction and resilience
Improvisational Content (mixed media, re-purposing,
Improvisational Presentation/Performance quot;Completequot; Authorship
expansion)
Originality Through the Telling Originality through Precise Description Originality in Presentation and Participation
Stewardship Ownership Collaborative sense-making
Associative Hierarchical (Taxonomic) Folksonomic
Shared Narrative Analysis Discovery and Personal Narrative
Clustered Linear Hypertextual
Permutative Unified, Codified, Static ('Complete' and Reproducible) Connected and Generative
Accumulation and Layering Replication and Reproduction Accretion and Organic Growth
Knowing what you can Knowing what you need Knowing enough
At the Time Ahead of Time Just in Time
Memorizing Stories Preparing Reproducible Stories Improvising Stories
Transmission Manipulation (identification and categorization) Participation (process and production)
Immediate Memory Local Storage Network Storage (access)
Technology as Necessity Technology as Application Technology as Environment
Proximal Local Global