Understanding and
supporting students' digital
         literacies

       Martin Oliver &
       Jude Fransman
Overview
•   What’s so important about ‘digital literacy’?
•   An introduction to the JISC project
•   What we have been doing, and how
•   Themes and issues
•   What this might mean for you
•   What this all might mean for the IOE

    – Slides available from diglitpga.jiscinvolve.org/
    – References included in slide notes

                                                         2
Context: digital who?
• Prensky, Tapscott, Oblinger & Oblinger
  – Digital natives, Net generation, Generation
    Y, Millenials…


• We know our learners, and they’re not us
  (even down to how their brains work)




                                                  3
Some have surmised that teenagers use different parts of
their brain and think in different ways than adults when at the
computer. We now know that it goes even further—their
brains are almost certainly physiologically different. *…+
Digital Natives accustomed to the twitch-
speed, multitasking, random-access, graphics-
first, active, connected, fun, fantasy, quick-payoff world of
their video games, MTV, and Internet are bored by most of
today’s education, well meaning as it may be. *…+
The cognitive differences of the Digital Natives cry out for new
approaches to education with a better fit.‖ And, interestingly
enough, it turns out that one of the few structures capable of
meeting the Digital Natives’ changing learning needs and
requirements is the very video and computer games they so
enjoy. This is why Digital Game-Based Learning is beginning to
emerge and thrive.

                                                               4
• There are trends, but no generational differences
       Rather than being empirically and theoretically informed,
       the debate can be likened to an academic form of a
       ‘moral panic’
                                              (Bennett, Maton & Kervin, 2008)
• Most students use whatever the course requires
  them to (…but are inconsistent in what they think
  is “required”…)
• There are important exceptions to engagement
   – E.g. minorities who engage in different ways, in the UK
     and internationally
  (Jones, Ramanau, Cross & Healing, 2010; Czerniewicz, Williams & Brown, 2009)


                                                                             5
Context: digital what?
• ‘Digital literacy’ pushed nationally but ambiguous
   –   Functional access
   –   Skills development
   –   Situated practices
   –   Creative appropriation / identity work
                                          (Sharpe & Beetham, 2010)

• Also argued that digital literacies should be
  understood as textual, not technological,
  practices
                                                (Jones & Lea, 2008)
                                                                  6
• A cluster of issues:
   – Skills development for ‘economic competitiveness’
   – Development of critical and research skills
   – Many stick to the basics rather than explore possibilities
   – Most learners are still strongly led by tutors and course
     practices
   – ‘Clash’ between informal practices and academic norms

There is a tension between recognising an 'entitlement'
to basic digital literacy, and recognising technology
practice as diverse and constitutive of personal identity,
including identity in different peer, subject and workplace
communities, and individual styles of participation.
                                       (Beetham, McGill & Littlejohn, 2009)


                                                                          7
JISC project overview
• Digital Literacies programme, 10 projects
  – http://www.jisc.ac.uk/whatwedo/programmes/elearning/developingd
    igitalliteracies/developingdigitalliteraciesprog.aspx
• “Digital literacies as a postgraduate attribute”
• 2-year funded project
  – 1st year, student research
  – 2nd year, implementation projects
• What do our students do and need?
• What can we change to help them?

                                                                  8
Project team
Jude Fransman
Lesley Gourlay
Susan McGrath
Martin Oliver
Gwyneth Price




                          9
Year one: student research
• Start broad and shallow; go deeper
  – Review of existing data via iGraduate
  – Focus groups
  – Journalling study


• Introduce each in turn



                                            10
iGraduate review
• Almost nothing about students’ identity
   – Blackboard ‘confusing’, library ‘fantastic’
• More on study practices
   – Want more discussion with peers, tutors
   – Concerns about lack of timely response to
     accommodation emails, and “ridiculous”
     password change policy
• Little on skills
   – Requests for orientation sessions

                                                   11
• Lots about access
  – Delays getting into VLE (up to two weeks)
  – Not enough open access computers
  – Sign on frustratingly slow (up to 20 minutes)
  – Not all students can access online course info
  – Frustration about internet access – particularly
    WiFi – and blocking Skype etc.
  – Request for out-of-hours IT support

                                                       12
Focus Groups
• Aims: to identify course-specific issues/themes
• Methodology:
   – 3 face-to-face focus groups held with PGCE, MA and
     PhD students
   – +1 online focus group with Distance MRes students via
     Elluminate
   – Selection: spread across courses, demographics and
     between part-time/full-time students
   – Challenges (coordinating the PGCE group)
• Focus on resources, domains, practices, identities
                                                        13
Domains and Resources




                        14
Well, in my bedroom, on my bed, it's mainly my
   mobile and going through my emails, travel
 information, whether on Facebook, my mobile
   too. Then, um, and in the study room, that
would be my laptop and, um, laptop, that would
    be Blackboard, research, entertainment.

                (MA student)


                                             15
Emerging issues
• Who controls access to domains/resources?
• How are resources defined as appropriate to one
  domain or another? (E.g. for study/work
  socialising)
• How do resources function differently in different
  domains? (E.g. using IOE email in the library/ at
  home)
• How do resources in particular domains configure
  students relationally? (E.g. Elluminate/Skype)
• How do resources connect to other resources?
  (E.g. Googledocs => Skype)
                                                   16
Digital Practices
With the forums, I think I would have found that very difficult to
track posting because when we’re meant to be looking at all the
  different conversations and participating, I would have found
   that too time-consuming to trawl through. So, what I found
  more helpful is just... Obviously you get the e-mail alerts from
any forums that you’re involved in and so I just, you know, check
 those occasionally and look at all the stuff that’s coming in and
  make a mental note and then just go in maybe once a day and
 reply to the ones that relate to me rather than having to search
around the forums themselves. So, that’s how I’ve handled it but
              I just kind of did that as my own system.

                        (OMRes student)


                                                                17
Emerging issues
• Searching for and managing information
  (access/awareness/filtering strategies etc.)
• Learning how to use new resources (e.g.
  Interactive Whiteboards)
• Identifying the right resource for the task
• Problems with software/hardware/
  infrastructure
• Who has responsibility for addressing
  technical problems?
                                                 18
Student Identities
 The only thing I struggle with, like I just mentioned it earlier
  before, is the issue of like keeping your private life separate
    from your work life because I think increasingly the two,
you're being forced to kind of mush the two together. Because
 like Birkbeck used to have its own email server and it would
provide you with an email. Now it’s provided by Gmail and it’s
  like everybody knows that Gmail is the nosiest thing in the
 world and tracks absolutely everything you do. And […] I'm a
   little bit uncomfortable with the idea that my work email
knows what shopping I do and, you know what I mean? I just
      find the whole thing is starting to get a little bit scary.

                         (PhD student)

                                                               19
Emerging issues
• Do digital resources (e.g. VLEs or platforms like
  Facebook/Skype etc.) segregate or merge
  student/social/professional identities?
• How do students relate to the university as an
  institution? (E.g. physical building; website;
  institutional email account; representatives such
  as exam centres or tutors)
• How are students configured or how do they
  configure themselves as learning communities
  (E.g. Blackboard/Facebook/Skype/face-to-face
  meetings etc.)

                                                      20
Longitudinal journaling
• Aims: To generate in-depth multimodal data on
  student’s digital practices in each of the 4 courses
• Methodology
   – Methodology piloted by the three researchers
   – 3 students selected from each course (12 in total)
   – 3 interviews with regular contact in between to
     discuss data collection
   – Interest in data collected, representation of data and
     process of data-collection
   – Analyzed according to students’ own theorisations of
     their data
   – Methodology mediated by the device (iPod Touch)
                                                              21
Mapping spaces and resources
    http://youtu.be/3IXGspusiWU




                                  22
Access




         23
Print literacies




                   24
Digital/digitised texts




                          25
26
• Challenges with resources and strategies to
  resolve them

     o Knowledge and skills
     o Problems with technology/
       infrastructure
     o Learning
     o Institutional and informal support




                                                27
• Feelings of belonging/isolation in different
  spaces mediated by resources

The sense of community is much stronger at my new school.
  People stay at work later- at the old school everyone left
   early. And at the old school we weren’t given any work
 space in the English department so we had to work in the
 staff room but at the new one we have desks so we really
  feel connected to the department. And its great because
everyone works at their desks and then for lunch they have
 ‘turn-in’ time when we all move our chairs away from our
              desks and eat together in a circle.

                      (PGCE student)
                                                           28
Emerging
methodological/
conceptual issues
How are students
processing and representing
their data?
• Different multimodal writing
  practices (e.g. handwritten
  journal in notebook V virtual
  notebook apps)
• Video used in different ways
  (e.g. audio explanation of
  images; capturing moving
  images; capturing sound and
  ambience)
                                  29
Domains: access and control
• Reluctance to use inscribed iPod in public
• Reluctance to use certain modes of data
  collection in certain spaces (e.g. camera in IOE
  library because prohibited; video in public
  galleries because of legal issues or school
  placements because of personal discomfit)



                                                 30
So, what might this mean for you?
• Just a small window on a complex picture

• A few minutes for discussion:
• What does this look like from your position?
  –   What technologies do you require students to use?
  –   How do you react when they don’t?
  –   Where and when do they do this? (Do you know?)
  –   What do they struggle with or get concerned about?
  –   What could we (all) do to help them?

                                                           31
What might this mean for the IOE?
• Your feedback:
  – What should we be aware of in the project?
  – What needs to be fed back to committees,
    services, etc?
  – What do teachers, learners and support staff need
    to do differently?




                                                    32
Thanks

For more about the project,
including access to the slides from this session,
go to: diglitpga.jiscinvolve.org




                                                    33

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Understanding and supporting students' digital literacies

  • 1. Understanding and supporting students' digital literacies Martin Oliver & Jude Fransman
  • 2. Overview • What’s so important about ‘digital literacy’? • An introduction to the JISC project • What we have been doing, and how • Themes and issues • What this might mean for you • What this all might mean for the IOE – Slides available from diglitpga.jiscinvolve.org/ – References included in slide notes 2
  • 3. Context: digital who? • Prensky, Tapscott, Oblinger & Oblinger – Digital natives, Net generation, Generation Y, Millenials… • We know our learners, and they’re not us (even down to how their brains work) 3
  • 4. Some have surmised that teenagers use different parts of their brain and think in different ways than adults when at the computer. We now know that it goes even further—their brains are almost certainly physiologically different. *…+ Digital Natives accustomed to the twitch- speed, multitasking, random-access, graphics- first, active, connected, fun, fantasy, quick-payoff world of their video games, MTV, and Internet are bored by most of today’s education, well meaning as it may be. *…+ The cognitive differences of the Digital Natives cry out for new approaches to education with a better fit.‖ And, interestingly enough, it turns out that one of the few structures capable of meeting the Digital Natives’ changing learning needs and requirements is the very video and computer games they so enjoy. This is why Digital Game-Based Learning is beginning to emerge and thrive. 4
  • 5. • There are trends, but no generational differences Rather than being empirically and theoretically informed, the debate can be likened to an academic form of a ‘moral panic’ (Bennett, Maton & Kervin, 2008) • Most students use whatever the course requires them to (…but are inconsistent in what they think is “required”…) • There are important exceptions to engagement – E.g. minorities who engage in different ways, in the UK and internationally (Jones, Ramanau, Cross & Healing, 2010; Czerniewicz, Williams & Brown, 2009) 5
  • 6. Context: digital what? • ‘Digital literacy’ pushed nationally but ambiguous – Functional access – Skills development – Situated practices – Creative appropriation / identity work (Sharpe & Beetham, 2010) • Also argued that digital literacies should be understood as textual, not technological, practices (Jones & Lea, 2008) 6
  • 7. • A cluster of issues: – Skills development for ‘economic competitiveness’ – Development of critical and research skills – Many stick to the basics rather than explore possibilities – Most learners are still strongly led by tutors and course practices – ‘Clash’ between informal practices and academic norms There is a tension between recognising an 'entitlement' to basic digital literacy, and recognising technology practice as diverse and constitutive of personal identity, including identity in different peer, subject and workplace communities, and individual styles of participation. (Beetham, McGill & Littlejohn, 2009) 7
  • 8. JISC project overview • Digital Literacies programme, 10 projects – http://www.jisc.ac.uk/whatwedo/programmes/elearning/developingd igitalliteracies/developingdigitalliteraciesprog.aspx • “Digital literacies as a postgraduate attribute” • 2-year funded project – 1st year, student research – 2nd year, implementation projects • What do our students do and need? • What can we change to help them? 8
  • 9. Project team Jude Fransman Lesley Gourlay Susan McGrath Martin Oliver Gwyneth Price 9
  • 10. Year one: student research • Start broad and shallow; go deeper – Review of existing data via iGraduate – Focus groups – Journalling study • Introduce each in turn 10
  • 11. iGraduate review • Almost nothing about students’ identity – Blackboard ‘confusing’, library ‘fantastic’ • More on study practices – Want more discussion with peers, tutors – Concerns about lack of timely response to accommodation emails, and “ridiculous” password change policy • Little on skills – Requests for orientation sessions 11
  • 12. • Lots about access – Delays getting into VLE (up to two weeks) – Not enough open access computers – Sign on frustratingly slow (up to 20 minutes) – Not all students can access online course info – Frustration about internet access – particularly WiFi – and blocking Skype etc. – Request for out-of-hours IT support 12
  • 13. Focus Groups • Aims: to identify course-specific issues/themes • Methodology: – 3 face-to-face focus groups held with PGCE, MA and PhD students – +1 online focus group with Distance MRes students via Elluminate – Selection: spread across courses, demographics and between part-time/full-time students – Challenges (coordinating the PGCE group) • Focus on resources, domains, practices, identities 13
  • 15. Well, in my bedroom, on my bed, it's mainly my mobile and going through my emails, travel information, whether on Facebook, my mobile too. Then, um, and in the study room, that would be my laptop and, um, laptop, that would be Blackboard, research, entertainment. (MA student) 15
  • 16. Emerging issues • Who controls access to domains/resources? • How are resources defined as appropriate to one domain or another? (E.g. for study/work socialising) • How do resources function differently in different domains? (E.g. using IOE email in the library/ at home) • How do resources in particular domains configure students relationally? (E.g. Elluminate/Skype) • How do resources connect to other resources? (E.g. Googledocs => Skype) 16
  • 17. Digital Practices With the forums, I think I would have found that very difficult to track posting because when we’re meant to be looking at all the different conversations and participating, I would have found that too time-consuming to trawl through. So, what I found more helpful is just... Obviously you get the e-mail alerts from any forums that you’re involved in and so I just, you know, check those occasionally and look at all the stuff that’s coming in and make a mental note and then just go in maybe once a day and reply to the ones that relate to me rather than having to search around the forums themselves. So, that’s how I’ve handled it but I just kind of did that as my own system. (OMRes student) 17
  • 18. Emerging issues • Searching for and managing information (access/awareness/filtering strategies etc.) • Learning how to use new resources (e.g. Interactive Whiteboards) • Identifying the right resource for the task • Problems with software/hardware/ infrastructure • Who has responsibility for addressing technical problems? 18
  • 19. Student Identities The only thing I struggle with, like I just mentioned it earlier before, is the issue of like keeping your private life separate from your work life because I think increasingly the two, you're being forced to kind of mush the two together. Because like Birkbeck used to have its own email server and it would provide you with an email. Now it’s provided by Gmail and it’s like everybody knows that Gmail is the nosiest thing in the world and tracks absolutely everything you do. And […] I'm a little bit uncomfortable with the idea that my work email knows what shopping I do and, you know what I mean? I just find the whole thing is starting to get a little bit scary. (PhD student) 19
  • 20. Emerging issues • Do digital resources (e.g. VLEs or platforms like Facebook/Skype etc.) segregate or merge student/social/professional identities? • How do students relate to the university as an institution? (E.g. physical building; website; institutional email account; representatives such as exam centres or tutors) • How are students configured or how do they configure themselves as learning communities (E.g. Blackboard/Facebook/Skype/face-to-face meetings etc.) 20
  • 21. Longitudinal journaling • Aims: To generate in-depth multimodal data on student’s digital practices in each of the 4 courses • Methodology – Methodology piloted by the three researchers – 3 students selected from each course (12 in total) – 3 interviews with regular contact in between to discuss data collection – Interest in data collected, representation of data and process of data-collection – Analyzed according to students’ own theorisations of their data – Methodology mediated by the device (iPod Touch) 21
  • 22. Mapping spaces and resources http://youtu.be/3IXGspusiWU 22
  • 23. Access 23
  • 26. 26
  • 27. • Challenges with resources and strategies to resolve them o Knowledge and skills o Problems with technology/ infrastructure o Learning o Institutional and informal support 27
  • 28. • Feelings of belonging/isolation in different spaces mediated by resources The sense of community is much stronger at my new school. People stay at work later- at the old school everyone left early. And at the old school we weren’t given any work space in the English department so we had to work in the staff room but at the new one we have desks so we really feel connected to the department. And its great because everyone works at their desks and then for lunch they have ‘turn-in’ time when we all move our chairs away from our desks and eat together in a circle. (PGCE student) 28
  • 29. Emerging methodological/ conceptual issues How are students processing and representing their data? • Different multimodal writing practices (e.g. handwritten journal in notebook V virtual notebook apps) • Video used in different ways (e.g. audio explanation of images; capturing moving images; capturing sound and ambience) 29
  • 30. Domains: access and control • Reluctance to use inscribed iPod in public • Reluctance to use certain modes of data collection in certain spaces (e.g. camera in IOE library because prohibited; video in public galleries because of legal issues or school placements because of personal discomfit) 30
  • 31. So, what might this mean for you? • Just a small window on a complex picture • A few minutes for discussion: • What does this look like from your position? – What technologies do you require students to use? – How do you react when they don’t? – Where and when do they do this? (Do you know?) – What do they struggle with or get concerned about? – What could we (all) do to help them? 31
  • 32. What might this mean for the IOE? • Your feedback: – What should we be aware of in the project? – What needs to be fed back to committees, services, etc? – What do teachers, learners and support staff need to do differently? 32
  • 33. Thanks For more about the project, including access to the slides from this session, go to: diglitpga.jiscinvolve.org 33

Editor's Notes

  • #4: Prensky, M. (2001) Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants, Part II: Do They Really Think Differently? On the Horizon, 9 (6). http://www.marcprensky.com/writing/Prensky%20-%20Digital%20Natives,%20Digital%20Immigrants%20-%20Part2.pdf
  • #5: Prensky, M. (2001) Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants, Part II: Do They Really Think Differently? On the Horizon, 9 (6). http://www.marcprensky.com/writing/Prensky%20-%20Digital%20Natives,%20Digital%20Immigrants%20-%20Part2.pdf
  • #6: Bennett, S., Maton, K. &Kervin, L. (2008) The ‘digital natives’ debate: A critical review of the evidence. British Journal of Educational Technology 39 (5): 775–786.Jones, C., Ramanau, R., Cross, S. & Healing, G. (2010) Net generation of Digital Natives: is there a distinct new generation entering university? Computers & Education, 54, 722-732Czerniewicz, L., Williams, K., & Brown, C. (2009) Students make a plan: understanding student agency in constraining conditions. ALT-J: Research in Learning Technology, 17 (2), 75-88.
  • #7: Sharpe, R. & Beetham, H. (2010) Understanding students’ uses of technology for learning: towards creative appropriation. In Sharpe, R., Beetham, H. & de Freitas, S. (eds), Rethinking learning for a Digital Age, 85-99. London: Routledge.Jones, S. & Lea, M. 2008. Digital literacies in the lives of undergraduate students: exploring personal and curricular spheres of practice. The Electronic Journal of e-Learning 6(3), 207-216.
  • #8: Beetham, H., McGill, L. & Littlejohn, A. (2009) Thriving in the 21st century: Learning Literacies for the Digital Age (LLiDA project). http://www.caledonianacademy.net/spaces/LLiDA/uploads/Main/LLiDAreportJune09.pdf
  • #17: EXAMPLES FROM PGCE/OMRES/MA FOCUS GROUPS:Many PGCE/MA students wont check facebook in the libraryOMRES: Informal study groups set up through Skype or some students ‘hang about’ after Elluminate sessions to chat. Some MA and PGCE students tend to check their IOE email in the library rather than at home as they don’t have to log in separately to the portal. However, everyone agrees that the computers take ages to start up and for this reason some students just use the library for browsing books.OMRES: students say that the video affordances of Skype make interactions more intimate than in Elluminate (where many students prefer to write in the ‘text box’ rather than to speak)OMRES: students find that using one resource (e.g. skype for group work) often promotes using another resource (e.g. Googledocs for collaborative writing)
  • #19: Lots of examples across focus groups of how students negotiate access (e.g. different accounts); solve problems (through official channels like inductions/short courses/help-sheets/helpdesk and informal channels like through peers of trial-and-error); and manage info-overload (e.g. discussions on the OMRes are streamed both as posts on the VLE and emails in private inboxes. Some student scan their emails as and when they come in and respond through the VLE aprox once a day)PGCE: some students benefited from short courses on using the whiteboards but many found that on-the-job learning from colleagues at placement schools was more effectiveRESPONSIBILITY = Some OMRes students thought that tutors should be competent in resolving tech problems and more responsive. Some confusion amongst MA students about when to use helpdesk/librarians/tutors
  • #21: PGCE (and MA): Blackboard is used as the primary site for course content but students don’t post on discussion forums (one did but by mistake!) However, many courses have their own Facebook groups set up by students who post regularly about the course – but wouldn’t necessarily want their tutors to see their posts.
  • #23: MA student Nahid shows his study space through video because the audio element is very important for his concentration. (Note digital and handwritten texts)Have the video set to ‘unlisted’ so can be accessed via the link but will change that to private tomorrow afternoon
  • #27: PhD student ‘Django’ uses both virtual stickies and physical post-it notes but for different purposes (post-its for more general and permanent info)
  • #28: Similar themes to those emerging from the focus groups
  • #31: Point 1. Refers to Nahid’s fear of using the iPod with Lesley’s name in a public space in case someone thought it was stolen. (Possibly due to his Bangladeshi ethnicity and greater susceptibility to being ‘stopped-and-searched’ by UK police)