15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The importance of technology and media in the classroom., July 24, 2010
Henry Jenkins has written several books dealing with technology, media, bloggers, gamers and the like. Now with Confronting the Challenges of Participatory Culture: Media Education for the 21st Century he has added education to the mix.
Jenkins notes several important things about the future of education (which interested me as a teacher). Formal education must address technology. It cannot be just paper and pencil. Technology is part of the modern world's media - it is not just newspapers, books, magazines, TV and movies. There are blogs, social media and a new one I hadn't really considered: video games.
Jenkins encourages the use of video games to teach. There are already several games such as Sims and the various history-based empire building games that teach rules and strategies for life. Jenkins cites the example of a young man who learned a lot about Rome (and through Rome, the structures of all societies) by playing an online game,
Caesar 3. The lessons learned were interesting, but the costs was too prohibitive for any school to use. It was not monetary costs (more on that down below) but the time costs. This young man invested hundreds of hours into this game. That cannot be done in a classroom, clearly, nor can I, as a teacher, guarantee that I can find anything like this that all, or even most, of my students can find a similar interest in.
But, the point is made and it is true - modern American students must be familiar with technology of all sorts.
Jenkins makes three other important points:
1) Students must be able to interpret and verify the value of all sorts of media. It is hard for students to distinguish advertising from more objective media. Students also fall for the age old problem of judging a book by its cover. They tend to think that the more polished the website, the more accurate its information. Let's admit it, it is easy to make that mistake and requires judgment based on knowledge and experience to overcome that bias.
2) There is a technological divide. Poorer students have less access. Students who have other interests chose to access less (a topic Jenkins only brushes). How do schools attempt to bridge this divide? I don't know that they truly can. Schools have computers and programs but, as any experienced computer user knows, it is quite expensive to keep up with technology.
If a school buys a desk, it is usable for a decade, maybe longer. It is current and does not need upgrading and minimal maintenance. Any computer a school buys is nearly out of date by the time it is installed. The programs are not current and buying the newest and latest cna cost hundreds of dollars for each copy for each computer in which it is installed, or thousands upon thousands for site licenses. Throw in to that the personnel to maintain the computers, the infrastructure to make them more usable and you're talking millions of dollars for a modern American high school. Millions of dollars that has to be re-invested every few years for upgrades and replacements.
To go back to the desks, it is very possible that the first school I taught in (1990-1993) is using the same student desks that were there when I taught. That school had 3 Apple Macintosh computers in the whole building. That's it. No classroom computers. Schedules were done by hand. Attendance was taken on paper. Since then, they've made a massive investment in servers, labs, printers, wires, projectors and it all has to be upgraded all of the time.
In a time of massive budget cuts, some of this becomes mere theory rather than practical discussion.
3) To his credit, Jenkins does not recommend that the computer/media literacy he espouses become a separate class. Rather, he encourages its integration into all classes. While this sounds like a way to get around the time issue (how can you fit a computer/media literacy class into a schedule that is so full as to prohibit many students from making any true choices in their schedule as it is?) this still takes time out of every class and practically guarantees the education he seeks will stay at the very basic level throughout the student's time in school.
So, to sum up, Jenkins makes plenty of observations on the value of technology to education - all of which I have no doubt are quite true. But, in our present educational climate I am not seeing many of these proposals moving from theory into genuine action.
Parents, it always has been and always will be up to you to fill in the blanks that a general education leaves and encourage your child. Technology is no different. Reading this book will give a parent an idea of where to go and how to proceed.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
a new era of cybercy, January 10, 2011
This review is from: Confronting the Challenges of Participatory Culture: Media Education for the 21st Century (The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Reports on Digital Media and Learning) (Paperback)
I think that this book is a fabulous composite of ideas and trends that are, and have been, encroaching on society. From the days of oral communications we have moved on to a litarate one, and now enter a new era of cybercy (I first heard this fro Catalina Laserna).
What I like most about this short easy read, is how it looks literacy education directly in the eye and I feel brings the philosophy of what literacy instruction can indeed do. Not only is literacy education a matter of reading and writing, but a tool to promote collective thinking and a way to develop the collective intellect of groups, societies, and nations.
The 21st century has brought some changes that are altering what we do and how we do things. Pedagogy will need to follow this. If this area of education is your cup of tea I feel this is an essential read, and while you are at it why not look at Warschauer (see link).
Technology and Social Inclusion: Rethinking the Digital Divide
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Timely and Informative, September 17, 2010
There are many salient features of the new media that has arisen over the past couple of decades, but perhaps the most important of these is the way that it has changed the way information is being consumed. None of us watch news passively any more, nor do we just use technology only in the ways that it was originally intended. We comment on the news article stories, either on the news sites themselves or even more prevalently today by sharing them with our social circles of friends. We also modify products or combine them with others in order to suit our own intentions and purposes. All of these actions are characteristics of the new "participatory culture," and this report illustrates how this culture is increasingly changing and shaping our lives.
One of the more interesting aspects of this book is a positive attitude towards video games. The author argues, against a lot of skepticism that is still present in society at large, that video games can be an interesting and useful educational vehicle and that educators need to help kids with getting the most benefit from playing. There has been a lot of research done on this topic, and the overwhelming consensus is that video games are overall mostly beneficial for the young people, even when it comes to socialization and civic engagement. With that in view it is not a radical or even controversial premise that using video games in an educational setting is wrongheaded.
This report also takes an issue with the whole notion that creative endeavors necessarily ought to be completely original, independent of all previous cultural influences. The author emphasizes the fact that most great creative individuals in the past (Homer, Shakespeare, Michelangelo) have freely borrowed others themes and ideas, and in the process created invaluable original works of art. The author advocates a much more unrestrained approach to fostering the creativity of the young people and gives several examples of how this could be achieved.
The report concludes with many good suggestions for parents, teachers and other who have a stake in promoting the technological literacy amount the young. This is a very well presented case for a more active educational engagement with the new and emerging technologies.
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