Photo by Priscilla Du Preez on Unsplash
The medium of my day was written. The way that we showed we understood/learned, was by completing a test or write a paper. That was it. It was less about empowerment and more about being an automaton. In the rare class, we would do an oral presentation. Those times have changed.
In class this week, we heard from Tim Winkelmans. He discussed the creation, and importance, of the BC Digital Literacy Framework within the education system of BC. I can’t agree more with the creation of this framework, though as my job is teaching technology, I may be biased. Having heard about the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE), during the meeting, I dug deeper into the ideals of this society. I feel it is nothing but a validation of how myself, and my fellow teachers at my school, are trying to increase our digital literacy to better empower our students. Though we are yet to meet all these standards, we are working to improve our abilities to incorporate more in our practice and, in turn, create more independent, adaptable, resilient, and multi-faceted students. In this blog, I want to concentrate on the empowered learner from both the BC Digital Literacy Framework and the ISTE Framework. Though the two are similar, it is interesting to see where the ISTE framework is more rigorous in terms of a student growth mindset.
The ISTE site describes the empowered learner as:
1a- Students articulate and set personal learning goals, develop strategies leveraging technology to achieve them and reflect on the learning process itself to improve learning outcomes.
1b- Students build networks and customize their learning environments in ways that support the learning process.
1c- Students use technology to seek feedback that informs and improves their practise and to demonstrate their learning in a variety of ways.
1d- Students understand the fundamental concepts of technology operations, demonstrate the ability to choose, use and troubleshoot current technologies and are able to transfer their knowledge to explore emerging technologies. (“ISTE Standards for Students,” n.d.)
See Chart created by Deirdre Houghton, Gary Soles, and I, displaying the BC digital Literacy outcomes the students will be meeting, below:
BC Digital Literacy Framework | Learning Outcome | Student Activity |
Research and Information Literacy |
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Critical Thinking, Problem Solving, and Decision Making |
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Creativity and Innovation |
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Digital Citizenship |
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Communication and Collaboration |
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Technology Operations and Concepts |
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In the master’s project that Deirdre, Gary, and I are aiming to create, we will be looking at cross-curricular inquiry, incorporating both theoretical and experiential outcomes. The students will have access to many technologies and classrooms to complete this project. The finished project is pre-designed as an outline, but the portion that the students are creating will be individual and representative of both their learning and the area that resonated with them. This, we hope, creates ownership and empowerment.
These standards mentioned above (both the BC Digital Literacy, and the ISTE framework), are the impetus for the expression of students learning. If a student is able to display their learning using the digital tools available to them, they tend to dig deeper into the process of learning, and not just make the pre-defined product that concentrates more on the result, than on the journey. In our school, the teachers who do inquiry, send learners to my lab to create different representations of their essential questions. The use of slideshows, movies, photography with voice over, photoshop representations, and others, affords the learners to not only realize they have an interest in technology but that the technology can help them realize their voice. Most importantly, they have to visualize what they want their presentation to look like and then learn how to make that a reality. This creates perseverance and troubleshooting skills that are essential to future life experiences.
Attached is a video series explaining the digital literacy we have created using OBS to showcase what the Aspire Software looks like:
References
Digital Literacy. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/education-training/k-12/teach/teaching-tools/digital-literacy
ISTE Standards for Students. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.iste.org/standards/for-students
Andrew Vogelsang
Sweet chart Andrew, your group is fantastic! =)
There is one troublemaker in the group but overall great 🙂
Hahaha! Hey Andrew and Gary, Awesome work on collaborating and pounding out our chart on Friday! LOVE IT!
Wow. That is thorough! This has to be the blog submitted for marking. The thought and effort and detail is amazing. The concept is much more involved then I expected for this assignment. Either you went to far (and it is remarkable), or I didn’t reflect deeply enough. I don’t see how I could give any feedback for improvement. .
Downloaded the OBS software that you used in your project. Great audio as well. I checked out your recommendations on Slack, so bought a headset to improve the audio as opposed to using the mic on the laptop. Thanks for setting up a great model on how to do it right 🙂
Glad to help. Anything you need let me know.