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ENGL665: Teaching Writing with Technology

Shelley Rodrigo, Author
Week 3: Sept. 8-14, page 4 of 6

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Reading Challenge: NL2 and Timeline (Amy


This week, I read chapter 2 of New Learning...opting to read first, then choose  a note-taking technology. Because the chapter was clearly organized along a progression, it occurred to me that a timeline might be appropriate. I chose Timeline (perhaps a given) and found that working with this program was much simpler, less glitchy than last week's Glogster. I found a template that seemed to capture how I was envisioning this progression (oddly enough, a business template).

I knew that I wanted to illustrate how the three paradigms overlapped (as Kalantzis and Cope make several efforts to point out). After reading the chapter, I had some pretty clear ideas of what such learning / classrooms would look like, so I knew images or graphics would be useful elements. Because this Timeline program is designed to resemble a collaborative space (a whiteboard - complete with sticky notes), I imagined this type of media would provide additional opportunities for supplemental visual examples from others...perhaps illustrations of class activities that suit each of the 8 Dimensions of Comparison.

This is, at its core, an outline of the key points and vocabulary of the three categories / paradigms described by the authors, but my hope is that the sticky note - image combinations would effectively (and succinctly) illustrate the details from the chapters.

The one visual element that may need a bit more explanation is the color / visual gradations. I was trying to illustrate that  while all three paradigm lines overlap as a timeline, the faded sections might represent how both the didactic and the authentic eventually fall out of the image given the "future" of New Learning as something still theoretical (and perhaps a bit utopian).

I would likely use this program in a classroom for project planning (certainly its most obvious use), perhaps for planning a research project. As a creative program, it does require some advance thinking about what -- exactly -- the relationships are that will be represented. I must have spent 30 minutes trying to decide on vertical vs. horizontal shapes for the paradigms. In the end, the traditional "timeline" organizational scheme won out as the most logical way to map that question.


This week I reviewed Heather's use of Diigo for New Learning, chapter 2 and Kim's use of Storify to review the 2nd chapter of Brain Rules. I think using Diigo holds a lot of promise for the amount of online, web-based reading we do as grad students, but I also think such a program might prove useful to undergraduate students working on research projects. There are so many web-note programs (Zortero, Diigo, etc.), and I'm looking forward to giving Diigo a try. The screenshot images gave me a sense of the possibilities, and since I'm a fan of sticky notes, this could be useful to me. I did wonder if the program compiled a list of notes into a separate document, as an option. That would be REALLY helpful.

Kim's Storify entry reminded me of my experience with Glogster: pick program at random, then read, then generate the notes. I really liked her idea of asking students to "translate" a research project into the storytelling media. I think the combination of discourses (student + resources) could be a powerful way to encourage students to begin internalizing these sources and "retranslating them" to serve the purpose of their own work.
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Discussion of "Reading Challenge: NL2 and Timeline (Amy"

Kim Comment on Amy Timeline

I think the timeline structure really seems to work with the paradigm structure New Learning uses, and it was great the way that this program allowed for the overlapping of these paradigms so it doesn't seem like one ends and another begins. The graphics really helped add depth to an understanding of what constitutes each of the paradigms.

Posted on 13 September 2014, 9:35 am by Kimberly Fahle  |  Permalink

Shantal Reading Notes, Week 2, 9/10 and Brain Rules 2 note challenge

This picture shows writing as two different kinds of technology from different eras. One is Ancient Sumerian (according to Google images) and the other is Computer Code. I put them next to each other to show that they are technological. 


Summary

The first chapter in Writing Technology: Studies on the Materiality of Literacy by Haas (1996)  is about the Technology Question present in writing studies. The Technology Question is present in many debates about how material writing is, and how separate orality and literacy are. There are three categories in which Haas examines the technological question: philosophical, historical, and sociopsychological. The Technology Question in philosophy is concerned with the effects of unifying language with a physical medium. For Plato, writing had negative psychological effects that would eventually cause writers to lose memory. Writing, for Plato, created a false sense of truth. There was also a clear duality between speech and writing. For Jacques Derrida, writing 2,500 years later, criticizes  the strict dichotomy between writing and speech. He deconstructs the dichotomy between body/soul and immaterial/material. In Derrida’s theory, writing created the Western world, not the other way around. Some scholars have studied literacy through analysing its effects on historical Greek culture. Walter Ong and Jack Goody have also addressed the Technology Question. For Ong, people think differently in oral cultures than they do in literate cultures. Goody studies the differences between literate and nonliterate cultures. The sociopsychological aspect to the Technology Question includes theorists who examine writing as a tool that affects the way individuals think. Lev Vygotsky considered symbol systems(writing) as part of an overall cultural system. He included writing as a tool that people used to interact with the natural world. Scribe and Cole also argue against the sharp divide between technology and writing.

The second chapter in the book surveys different ways that the technology used to write has been studied. The change in technology has prompted more people to notice its materiality. There are different levels in which to study the effects of technology on writing: individual, cultural, and material. Technology studies are interdisciplinary as different scholars from different fields have to learn about how to study technology. Two myths impede the study of technology: the myth that technology is transparent, and the myth that technology is all encompassing and all powerful. Haas outlines different theories of writing and explains that cognitive theory, classical rhetorical theory, and postmodern theory do not provide a sufficient background to build a theory of writing based on technology.

In The Politics of the Interface: Power and its Exercise in Electronic Contact Zones, Self& Self(1994) examine the interface f the computer as a “linguistic contact zone” (p. 482). THe article discusses how interfaces can privilege the dominant culture and transmit certain attitudes about people. For example, computer interfaces often privileges English as a language. Eliminating certain forms of colonialism and oppression from interfaces requires critical thinking from teachers as they expose students to new technologies. Teachers should be able to tell students about different kinds of borders found in technology: virtual, cultural, and linguistic.


Discussion:

It’s important to note that writing is a form of technology that was once new. The picture embedded on the page shows two different eras of technology. People in Ancient Sumeria Reading Plato from the perspective of someone living in the 21st century where literacy is basically required to survive in the world can seem a little strange or even humorous. The fact that Plato was thinking about how writing could change society or change the way people think is very interesting and still relevant, especially with new technologies. Plato did not think that writing was conducive to truth and learning.On the other hand, there is Writing in the Disciplines is a pedagogical movement in which teachers encourage their students to write to learn. Writing, in this theory of learning, is a way to truth.  As new technologies arise, there are always traditionalists and naysayers who fear it. There are probably many people who are skeptical about teaching new media in the classroom because they find it distracting and not necessarily pedagogically sound. It is important not to naysay new technology because that can be reactive, but to think about it analytically and observe how it affects writing and learning.



“Writing created the West, not the other way around” (as cited in Haas, 1996, p. 7).

This quotation is from a scholar paraphrasing Derrida, and I find this concept really interesting. I know Haas’s work is really just commenting on how different theorists see the Technology Question but this quote did jump out at me. “The West,” according to this quote, would be a construct that depends deeply on the technology of writing. This idea could be connected to Derrida and Foucault’s ideas about archive and power. If writing formed the Western world, then it is important to remember that a majority of people in the Western world were not literate. Now with compulsory, widespread education, that has changed. It is still something really interesting to consider as we learn about technology and the history of education. Derrida also did not agree with Plato’s strict dichotomy for speech and writing, for him, writing was “always there.” I am not sure how that would be possible, especially considering that there are still oral cultures that transmit information without the use of visual symbols. You can have a system of speech without a system of writing, but I have not heard of any societies that only had a visual form of communication.


“ This is not to claim, of course, that the only educational effects computers have is one of re-producing oppression or colonial mentalities”(Self & Self, 1994, p. 482).


The Self&Self article is  useful for teachers and perhaps other users of technology because it reminds us that there are power structures built in to computers. While technology like the internet has been lauded as a tool of democratization, it is also  tool which we can use to unfortunately oppress and discriminate. Extreme examples include cyberbullying young women online simply because they are women visible in a public space. Technology exposes many people to different views and different people, but it does not mean that it automatically changes perspectives or causes people to think critically about their cultural attitudes. The issue of accessibility also pops up again. Not all students have access to technology when they are home, so they may fall behind when they have to use technology in the classroom.


References

Haas, C. (1996).  Writing technology: Studies on the materiality of literacy. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Link.


Self, C.L & Self, R.J. (1994). “The politics of interface: Power and its exercise in electronic contact zones.” College Composition and Communication. 45(4). 480-504. http://www.ncte.org/library/NCTEFiles/Resources/Journals/CCC/1994/0454-dec1994/CCC0454Politics.pdf



Brain Rules Ch 2 Prezi


For this week’s note-taking challenge, I used Prezi. I have never used Prezi before. Like mind maps, I think Prezi is a presentation system that encourages people to summarize. I have seen Prezi used in classroom presentations, so like powerpoint, you are supposed to give additional aural presentation that goes with the visual cues on the screen. Unlike with Mindmap, you can create different kinds of relationship between information. I decided to use bigger or smaller circles to give information hierarchy, but you can create all sorts of relationships between the bubbles. One could create a timeline in Prezi, for example. Using Prezi really did force me to think about the Brain Rules chapter and take out the information I thought was most important to learn. Though I did not add any voice-overs, it is possible with the use of Prezi.




This week I commented on Kim Fahle's Reading and Thinking notes and Note-Taking challenge: 

Chapters in Boyer's book, Scholarship Reconsidered: Priorities of the Proffesoriate seem really interesting. I did not have to read it since I am not a PHD student, but it does touch on some important issues. In my own experience, academics are often involved in a lot of public engagement- just in very specialized areas. I can also understand some of the responses to this piece. For scholars in the English department especially, it really is Publish or Die. So while public engagement is a great idea, scholars may not get the time or the wide platform.

Kim's Storify notes on Brain Rules chapter 2 is really cool and fun. I think that this software would be fun to experiment with and provides a great way to think about taking notes multimodally. Storify, like Kim says, seems to encourage its users to make personalized stories. Thus, you are encourage to create a narrative with your notes through words, images, and video. Narratives can be a good way to learn, especially since we all have experience interacting with a lot of narratives.

Amy did a Timeline of New Learning 2 and also did reading notes for this week.

I think the Timeline is a very interesting way to organize the chapter. The visuals and the way the time line is structured would be a good way to get a quick reminder about what was in the chapter. I could actually see Timeline used as a study tool to remember processes. For example, the traditional rhetorical canons are essentially the steps in composing an oral or textual piece- invention, arrangement, style, memory, delivery. These could be easily summarized with a timeline.

For her reading notes, Amy also commented on Boyer's piece. I agree that it is a shame that community colleges are often seen as less legitimate than other institutions, especially since they serve a diverse population of students. A lot of the scholarship I've read about pedagogy comes from professors at community colleges, and generalizing broadly, it seems like many community college professors can choose to experiment more with their writing courses.

Posted on 14 September 2014, 11:48 pm by ShantalFigueroa  |  Permalink

beautiful

The timeline is beautiful. Is it interactive (aka, can you give us a link to it?) or does it only produce a static image?

Posted on 25 September 2014, 5:35 am by Shelley Rodrigo  |  Permalink

oooohhhh

so it's the timeline interface/template for "real time board"
interesting.

Posted on 25 September 2014, 5:36 am by Shelley Rodrigo  |  Permalink

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