Option
1: Information Literacy
We have offered you a way of thinking about information literacy using the infographic from National Forum on Information Literacy (NFIL) in the discussion forum as well as some information on the CRAAP test for information sources on the readings and resources page. Explore other resources for information literacy, considering the many aspects of it on the NFIL infographic. Identify tools with which you might teach information literacy to your students. Answer the following questions:
a. Identify the tools you found to teach information literacy to your students. Identify at least 4 different tools. Describe where they fit into the NFIL infographic and how you found the tool.
b. Evaluate the tools. Why did you include them in your list. What is particularly useful about the tool? Looking at the NFIL infographic, what areas do these tools neglect, and how can you justify leaving those areas out of any information literacy learning for your students.
c. Think about how these resources or this thinking about information literacy can transform your teaching or your students. Describe and evaluate that transformation.
We have offered you a way of thinking about information literacy using the infographic from National Forum on Information Literacy (NFIL) in the discussion forum as well as some information on the CRAAP test for information sources on the readings and resources page. Explore other resources for information literacy, considering the many aspects of it on the NFIL infographic. Identify tools with which you might teach information literacy to your students. Answer the following questions:
a. Identify the tools you found to teach information literacy to your students. Identify at least 4 different tools. Describe where they fit into the NFIL infographic and how you found the tool.
b. Evaluate the tools. Why did you include them in your list. What is particularly useful about the tool? Looking at the NFIL infographic, what areas do these tools neglect, and how can you justify leaving those areas out of any information literacy learning for your students.
c. Think about how these resources or this thinking about information literacy can transform your teaching or your students. Describe and evaluate that transformation.
To begin my search for tools to
teach information literacy, I simply performed a google search for “technology
to teach critical reading.” A plethora
of sites appeared but I chose the following site to explore, https://gsi.berkeley.edu/teachingguide/tech/classroom.html#clickers. It is actually
a teaching guide for graduate students at Berkeley. The site discusses the use of white boards, document
cameras, clickers, and in-class chats, IM, and tweets. I have never used in-class chats, IM, or
tweets before but by reading the description, I believe in-class instant
messaging will support critical reading and thinking. This tool does neglect the other areas of
information literacy but instant messaging can be used to discuss the other
areas. Utilizing IM vs. the traditional
class discussion allows more students to participate and forces the student to
read and think about what their peers are writing before responding. Instant messaging and tweeting also enables
the discussion to continue outside of the traditional classroom. Ideas can be added after school hours and the
discussions can be saved for later reference.
I am
most excited about the next tool I found by reading one of the articles linked
to the interesting ed tech website Dr. Dziorny posted. The article is titled, Do Your Students Know How to Search?, http://www.edudemic.com/student-search-skills/.
As a teacher, I can perform a basic search on Google
and find something relevant but I struggle with teaching my students how to
perform efficient web searches using research and library skills. The article led me to https://news.google.com/. After further investigation, I discovered I
can obtain archived scanned newspaper articles simply be typing the following
in a Google search, site:google.com/newspapers "the
Berlin wall". By changing the topic in quotations, the user
can find newspaper articles concerning almost anything. This tool directly relates to research and
library skills but also incorporates the other skills. The scanned articles of actual newspapers
will help teach media literacy by exposing students to a format they are not
familiar with. Exploring a newspaper and
the surrounding articles and advertisements allows for a wide variety of
discussions and the teaching of critical literacy. A teacher can also teach information ethics
by incorporating how to cite the information.
I believe this tool can transform my teaching and my students by showing
them resources they have never seen before.
The students can experience history in a format unfamiliar to them but readily
used in the past. Until now, I thought
we still had to go to the library to access archived newspaper articles!
Moving along the NFIL infographic, I directed my search towards media
literacy and more specifically visual literacy.
An article titled Teaching Media
Literacy with Technology, http://www.learningandleading-digital.com/learning_leading/201305?pg=34#pg34 directed me to the www.huffingtonpost.com. I have seen
articles by Huffingtonpost.com on my Facebook newsfeed but I had never paid
much attention to it until now.
Huffingtonpost.com runs a column titled Photoshop Fails, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/news/photoshop-fail/. This column
could open the discussion for not only photo shopping of models but also the
ethics and reasons for Photoshopping. I
believe showing Photoshop Fails to high school students would cause a heated
discussion. Using this website in a
classroom can enhance all information literacy skills. The students are analyzing visual literacy
while thinking and reading critically. To
use research and library skills, the teacher could require the student to
locate sites with a particular photo from the Photoshop Fail column to compare
and contrast. Information ethics is also
important when discussing the ethics of Photoshop and who has the right to
perform Photoshop. Without technology,
students could discuss Photoshopping in a particular magazine but the internet
transforms the lesson by providing multiple examples instantly.
The article, Teaching Media Literacy with Technology, led me to my last tool
which incorporates all information literacy skills. The article uses Voicethread, http://voicethread.com/products/k12/ to lead a class discussion concerning advertising
but after further investigation, I believe Voicethread can be used in any
subject area. Using Voicethread, the
teacher can upload an image and the students can respond through video, audio,
or text. This is similar to a class
discussion but allows the students to participate in a variety of formats both
during the school day and after school.
I believe this versatile feature transforms the classroom. Voicethread requires the students to use
critical literacy by thinking about their peer’s responses before
responding. Media literacy, research and
library skills, and information ethics can also be incorporated by discussing a
particular image or piece of media.
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