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Curriculum Development and Teacher Education

The pursuit of Digital Literacy and e-Inclusion in Schools. Curriculum Development and Teacher Education. Lampros K. Stergioulas Brunel University, UK. e-START Network. Project Co-ordinator : Dr Lampros Stergioulas, BRUNEL University, UK Partners: HUT Finland MII Lithuania

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Curriculum Development and Teacher Education

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  1. The pursuit of Digital Literacy and e-Inclusion in Schools Curriculum Development and Teacher Education Lampros K. Stergioulas Brunel University, UK

  2. e-STARTNetwork Project Co-ordinator: Dr Lampros Stergioulas, BRUNEL University, UK Partners: HUT Finland MII Lithuania MENON Belgium AUTH Greece NCSR Greece ITN France CSI Austria ITD Italy Tikkurila Finland e-START Project is funded by the European Commission, as a part of the e-LEARNING programme. 2

  3. Project fundamentals:The e-START Premise Common basis with respect to: (1) The concept of digital literacy in schools (2) The development of a democratic and participatory curriculum framework for digital literacy in schools

  4. Cross-country Networks • Vertical areas of interest: • Educational Frameworks –Curricula for compulsory education • Teacher Education • Horizontal thematic areas of study: • Conceptualizations of digital literacy: Theoretical Frameworks - National Curricula • The pursuit of digital literacy: Quantitative indicators and qualitative factors affecting it • Acquiring digital literacy: Action roadmaps and didactical scenarios • Digital Literacy and Social inclusion: Processes of participatory and re-constructionist framework development

  5. A Common Framework? • What does “digital literacy” mean? • What is the relationship between digital literacy and other forms of information and communication literacies? • What is the relationship between digital literacy and the digital divide? • Through what kind of actions and strategies could we foster the development of a common European rationale for the pursuit of digital literacy in compulsory education?

  6. Digital Literacy: The history • 1990s: The ability to comprehend “hypertext” structure and understand “multimedia” texts. • 1997: “Digital Literacy” by Paul Gilster “Digital Literacy is the ability to understand and use information in multiple formats from a wide variety of sources when it is presented via computers“

  7. Digital Literacy: The history Late 1990s: The multi-literacies period

  8. Digital Literacy: The history • OECD/CERI, 2001: Digital Literacy is used interchangeably with ICT Literacy. • OECD/CERI, 2003: Programme for International Student Assessment – Feasibility Study for the PISA ICT Literacy Assessment • “ICT literacy is the interest, attitude, and ability of individualsto appropriately use digital technology and communicationtools to access, manage, integrate, and evaluate information,construct new knowledge, and communicate with others inorder to participate effectively in society”

  9. Digital Literacy: The history • EU, 2004: “Promoting Digital Literacy” – Final Report, EAC/76/03 • Digital literacy is treated as synonymous to media literacy • Project DigEuLit, 2005: “The development of a European Framework for Digital Literacy” • “Digital Literacy is the awareness, attitude and ability of individuals to appropriately use digital tools and facilities to identify, access, manage, integrate, evaluate, analyse and synthesize digital resources, construct new knowledge, create media expressions, and communicate with others, in the context of specific life situations, in order to enable constructive social action; and to reflect upon this process.

  10. Digital Literacy: Basic characteristics • Refers not only to the skills of operating and using a wide range of information and communication technological environments (hardware devices and software platforms), but also to the processes of “reading” and “understanding” the contents of these technological environments, as well as the processes of “creating” and “writing” such contents (information, services, resources, etc) • Even though is often described in comparison to the umbrella term “ICT literacy”, which is broader than both computer and network literacy, it appears to contain it.

  11. Digital Literacy: Basic characteristics • DL is indisputably related to media literacy, because it addresses social, cultural, human and ethical issues related to digital citizenship, emphasizes the influential role of digital mass media of expression and considers their attributes, merits and limitations. • The contemporary endorsement of digital literacy is perceived as an act in response to the emergence and broadening of the “digital divide”, a complex phenomenon involving a web of inter-related cultural and socio-economic factors.

  12. Digital Divide: a concept in permanent flux • Disparities in technology access between developed and developing nations • Disparities in technology access within individual countries Perceived as a dichotomous gap between the “haves” and the “have nots”, that could be counteracted through the provision of universal access to technology for all.

  13. Digital Divide: a concept in permanent flux Contemporary notions suggest that: • Emphasis on the access factor alone is rather deterministic • Both the “digital divide” and “access to technology” are hierarchical and not dichotomous concepts • The digital divide is simultaneously a projection and an extension of the “social exclusion phenomenon” • Quality of use of digital technology is dependent on the “economic”, “cultural” and “social capital” that individuals possess and project in their engagement with technology

  14. Digital literacy – Digital divide • Digital literacy is a hierarchical concept, existing in a continuum • Digital literacy is relative (may take different meanings in different cultural and socio-economic contexts) • Digital literacy development targets contemporary socio-economic problems and prevailing educational conditions involving notions of power, dominant ideology and hegemonic culture.

  15. Factors and Indicators of Digital Literacy in Schools • ACCESS (and USE) • - access to computers at school • - Ownership of digital equipment and resources at home • - …. • “Digital Divide” in EU is often perceived in terms of Access and Use (see i2010 report of EC)

  16. Factors and Indicators of Digital Literacy in Schools • RELEVANCE • - “digital incentives” for life after schooling • - children’s “lifestyle choices” • - motivation, interest and attitude towards digital culture • - perceptions of usefulness and value of digital technology in everyday life

  17. Factors and Indicators of Digital Literacy in Schools • SOCIAL RESOURCE NETWORKS • - pupils’ and teachers’ membership in different social communities • - differentiated forms of culture

  18. Factors and Indicators: Some pertinent questions • Could the school as a significant socialization and enculturation agent address effectively factors related to issues of relevanceand social networks and empower pupils and teachers to participate in digital practice, not only as consumers of digital dominant culture but also as producers and communicators of their own culture? • What may be the institutional, organizational and educational changes that would enable schools to play such a socially responsible and significant role and help us all in keeping warm the hope of an inclusive society?

  19. A Pan-European Digital Literacy Framework? • Should address aspects of relevance and relativity, by: • Being flexible enough and adaptive to the differentiated conditions of the community in which it is to be implemented. • Being unified and unifying, but only in terms of a central core of methodologies and values • Investing on project-based, child-centered, inclusive, experiential, thematic and integrated approaches to teaching and learning • Should address established socio-economic and cultural problems and foster the empowerment of social –resource networks by: • Participatory/bottom–up approaches to curriculum development • Being re-constructionist, in the sense that it should educate by fostering exploration, understanding, reflection and analysis of social problems, events and issues, and by stressing social responsibility and action-praxis towards changing the conditions that create antidemocratic and inhuman practices in school and in society.

  20. A Framework development process • The creation and development of a EU-wide “network of networks” of academics, researchers and educational representatives. • Collect, review and analyze the contents of established and implemented educational frameworks and/or curricula related to digital literacy • Collect, review and analyze the contextual and content characteristics of national teacher training and teacher education actions related to the development of digital literacy • Identify critical factors, indicators and conditions that may promote or hinder the pursuit of digital literacy in compulsory education • On the basis of the previous knowledge, start building consensus around a central core of methodologies and values

  21. National Networks • Main aim:The analysis of the status of digital literacy in individual EU member countries and the development of educational policy recommendations • Synthesis/composition: (a) Academic community members, (b) Teaching community members, (c) Parent and pupil community members, and (d) educational authority representatives • Activities: (a) Collection and analysis of national primary data and information, (b) Review and analysis of the national theoretical and research educational literature, and (c) Development and then negotiation, modification and validation of a national report on digital literacy

  22. Cross-country Networks • Main Aim: The identification of generalizable definitional aspects and generalizable goals and contents for digital literacy development in compulsory education, as well as the development and establishment of cross-country educational policy recommendations at EU level • Synthesis/Composition: (a) Participants of national networks, and (b) Representatives of other cross-country networks, European and/or international organizations activated in the area of digital literacy • Activities: (a) Comparative analysis of individual country national reports, (β) Review and analysis of research and educational literature of an international status, and (c) Development and then negotiation, modification and validation of cross-country • Organization of activities: Two vertical axes, four horizontal thematic agendas

  23. Cross-country Networks • Vertical areas of interest: • Educational Frameworks –Curricula for compulsory education • Teacher Training initiatives and Teacher Education programmes of study • Horizontal thematic areas of study: • Conceptualizations of digital literacy: Theoretical Frameworks - National Curricula • The pursuit of digital literacy: Quantitative indicators and qualitative factors affecting it • Acquiring digital literacy: Action roadmaps and didactical scenarios • Digital Literacy and Social inclusion: Processes of participatory and re-constructionist framework development

  24. Barriers to overcome • Differences in the way “digital literacy” is being defined, interpreted and understood • The multiple cultural, social and economical gaps and divides existing between countries and within countries • The difficulty in cooperating and communicating in the context of cross-national and cross-cultural networks (heterogeneous landscape of regulation, legacy/tradition and language/semantics) • The difficult issue of achieving access to primary-source data and, in particular comparable data • The unavoidable obstacles of establishing and implementing framework building processes of a participatory nature and a bottom-up direction

  25. …and most importantly • The promotion of a “new ethos” towards the process of designing and implementing educational policy and the endorsement of the idea of syn-praxis and unity within divergence, which: • Requires transformative changes in the processes of designing and developing the aims, the contents and the organization of education • Disputes the structures, the regulatory settings, and the contents of a centralized education

  26. Achievements in the first year • Launched the e-START portal www.estart-net.org • Observatory Service offered through the portal (repositories of papers, books, projects, etc.) • EU-wide network of 119 members from 21 different countries (and rapidly growing) • Collected 19 National ICT curricula from EU countries, 9 translated in English

  27. Achievements in the first year • Organised four International Workshops and Symposia on Digital Literacy • Approved for continuation of funding from the EC

  28. Planned activities in 2008 • e-START membership to exceed 300 • A number of services offered via the e-START portal • Active online participation of the community (e-START services, forum, local communities etc.) • Support service for lesson plan development for school teachers • Closer collaboration with IFIP TC3

  29. Events in 2008 • e-START Workshop on Digital Literacy Curricula, in iSSEP 2008, Torun, Poland, 1-4 July 2008. • Panel on Digital Literacy, in WCC2008, Milan, September 2008. • e-START Conference (London, 17-18 Nov 2008)

  30. How to get involved Member registration (free): Digital Literacy Networkwww.estart-net.org

  31. How to get involved Participate in the new Special Interest Group: SIG 3.9 (IFIP TC3) – Digital Literacy - Chaired by Bernard Cornu See SIG 3.9 at www.ifip-tc3.net/

  32. BRUN Digital Literacy Network forPrimary & Lower Secondary (K-9) Education TKK Dipoli Tilu MII MENON CSI INT AUTH ITD NCSR

  33. e-START Conference (2 days, London, 17-18 Nov 2008) Free registration and proceedings Register at www.estart-net.org Digital Literacy Network

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