New Media in the Classroom: Rethinking Primary Literacy

Author:   Cathy Burnett (Sheffield Hallam University, UK) ,  Guy Merchant (Sheffield Hallam University, UK)
Publisher:   Sage Publications Ltd
ISBN:  

9781526420855


Pages:   160
Publication Date:   07 June 2018
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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New Media in the Classroom: Rethinking Primary Literacy


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Overview

'This an exciting publication that offers authentic approaches for educators to meet challenges of the literacy that students need in our evolving digital landscape.' Maureen Walsh, Adjunct Professor, Australian Catholic University and Honorary Professor, The University of Sydney 'In this significant new text, Cathy Burnett and Guy Merchant foreground the affective, embodied and emergent nature of making meaning with new media.' Teresa Cremin, The Open University The rise of new media technologies has changed the ways in which children engage with texts and this has implications for literacy provision in schools. Drawing on research exploring new media practices within and outside school, this book explains and encourages classroom activity that makes purposeful and appropriate use of these literacies and is underpinned by a set of guiding principles for teaching literacy in contemporary times. Key topics include: Building on children's experiences in and out of school Supporting children to draw on multiple modes and media to develop and convey meaning Developing a responsive approach to literacy provision Investigating ways of encouraging collaboration through and around digital media Encouraging children to use digital media safely and advantageously This is essential reading for primary English or elementary language arts modules on initial teacher education courses including university-based and schools-based routes into teaching and also for current teachers wishing to enhance their own literacy teaching. Cathy Burnett is Professor of Literacy and Education at Sheffield Hallam University. Guy Merchant is Professor of Literacy in Education at Sheffield Hallam University.

Full Product Details

Author:   Cathy Burnett (Sheffield Hallam University, UK) ,  Guy Merchant (Sheffield Hallam University, UK)
Publisher:   Sage Publications Ltd
Imprint:   Sage Publications Ltd
Weight:   0.280kg
ISBN:  

9781526420855


ISBN 10:   1526420856
Pages:   160
Publication Date:   07 June 2018
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: The challenge of 21st century literacies Chapter 2: Acknowledge the changing nature of meaning making Chapter 3: Recognise and build on children’s linguistic, social and cultural repertoires Chapter 4: Acknowledge diverse modes and media Chapter 5: Recognise the affective, embodied and material dimensions of meaning making Chapter 6: Encourage improvisation and experimentation Chapter 7: Use playful pedagogies Chapter 8: Create opportunities to work with the provisionality of digital media Chapter 9: Provide contexts that facilitate criticality Chapter 10: Promote collaboration around and through texts in negotiating meaning Chapter 11: Making the future together

Reviews

This an exciting publication that offers authentic approaches for educators to meet challenges of the literacy that students need in our evolving digital landscape. Cathy and Guy apply ongoing educational research to justify their proposal of a Charter for 21st Century Literacies . While acknowledging extant polarisations and tensions, the nine principles of their Charter are designed around specific pedagogical approaches that allow for the diversity of students, their environment and the media. Through each chapter the authors demonstrate the need for classrooms to enable creative, collaborative and experimental meaning making that draw on different elements of one's communication repertoire . Examples are offered to demonstrate the multidimensional potential of literacy across linguistic, media and social contexts. -- Dr Maureen Walsh This book is a great read for educators and folks concerned with the impact on digital technologies on young people's literacy learning. It grapples with all the main questions teachers are asking about how and whether to incorporate communication technologies into their curriculum. It offers a set of principles to consider when working with new media in the classroom, which are both ethical and pragmatic. Burnett and Merchant's writing is uncluttered, entertaining and wise. I can imagine teacher study groups, staff meetings and seminars organized around this very helpful book. While these authors are exploring new theoretical ground in their scholarship their treatment of this complex area is light, accessible and fresh. -- Barbara Comber In this significant new text, Cathy Burnett and Guy Merchant foreground the affective, embodied and emergent nature of making meaning with new media. They offer fascinating examples of children and young people engaged in improvising their way forwards as they compose and collaborate in different digital environments. Illuminating the playfulness and provisionality involved, the authors skilfully show teachers how to create space for such experimentation, enabling children to engage both creatively and critically in this digital age. -- Teresa Cremin Two established and innovative scholars partnered with classroom practitioners to generate new knowledge of how to support expansive meaning making for children in contemporary times-what's not to love? The book's pedagogical principles are essential and expertly explicated and illustrated. This book will be cherished by academics, students, and teachers. -- Rachel Heydon


"Two established and innovative scholars partnered with classroom practitioners to generate new knowledge of how to support expansive meaning making for children in contemporary times—what’s not to love? The book’s pedagogical principles are essential and expertly explicated and illustrated. This book will be cherished by academics, students, and teachers. -- Rachel Heydon In this significant new text, Cathy Burnett and Guy Merchant foreground the affective, embodied and emergent nature of making meaning with new media. They offer fascinating examples of children and young people engaged in improvising their way forwards as they compose and collaborate in different digital environments.  Illuminating the playfulness and provisionality involved, the authors skilfully show teachers how to create space for such experimentation, enabling children to engage both creatively and critically in this digital age.   -- Teresa Cremin This book is a great read for educators and folks concerned with the impact on digital technologies on young people’s literacy learning. It grapples with all the main questions teachers are asking about how and whether to incorporate communication technologies into their curriculum. It offers a set of principles to consider when working with new media in the classroom, which are both ethical and pragmatic. Burnett and Merchant’s writing is uncluttered, entertaining and wise. I can imagine teacher study groups, staff meetings and seminars organized around this very helpful book. While these authors are exploring new theoretical ground in their scholarship their treatment of this complex area is light, accessible and fresh.   -- Barbara Comber This an exciting publication that offers authentic approaches for educators to meet challenges of the literacy that students need in our evolving digital landscape. Cathy and Guy apply ongoing educational research to justify their proposal of a ""Charter for 21st Century Literacies"". While acknowledging extant polarisations and tensions, the nine principles of their Charter are designed around specific pedagogical approaches that allow for the diversity of students, their environment and the media. Through each chapter the authors demonstrate the need for classrooms to enable ""creative, collaborative and experimental meaning making that draw on different elements of one’s communication repertoire"". Examples are offered to demonstrate the multidimensional potential of literacy across linguistic, media and social contexts. -- Dr Maureen Walsh"


Two established and innovative scholars partnered with classroom practitioners to generate new knowledge of how to support expansive meaning making for children in contemporary times-what's not to love? The book's pedagogical principles are essential and expertly explicated and illustrated. This book will be cherished by academics, students, and teachers. -- Rachel Heydon In this significant new text, Cathy Burnett and Guy Merchant foreground the affective, embodied and emergent nature of making meaning with new media. They offer fascinating examples of children and young people engaged in improvising their way forwards as they compose and collaborate in different digital environments. Illuminating the playfulness and provisionality involved, the authors skilfully show teachers how to create space for such experimentation, enabling children to engage both creatively and critically in this digital age. -- Teresa Cremin This book is a great read for educators and folks concerned with the impact on digital technologies on young people's literacy learning. It grapples with all the main questions teachers are asking about how and whether to incorporate communication technologies into their curriculum. It offers a set of principles to consider when working with new media in the classroom, which are both ethical and pragmatic. Burnett and Merchant's writing is uncluttered, entertaining and wise. I can imagine teacher study groups, staff meetings and seminars organized around this very helpful book. While these authors are exploring new theoretical ground in their scholarship their treatment of this complex area is light, accessible and fresh. -- Barbara Comber This an exciting publication that offers authentic approaches for educators to meet challenges of the literacy that students need in our evolving digital landscape. Cathy and Guy apply ongoing educational research to justify their proposal of a Charter for 21st Century Literacies . While acknowledging extant polarisations and tensions, the nine principles of their Charter are designed around specific pedagogical approaches that allow for the diversity of students, their environment and the media. Through each chapter the authors demonstrate the need for classrooms to enable creative, collaborative and experimental meaning making that draw on different elements of one's communication repertoire . Examples are offered to demonstrate the multidimensional potential of literacy across linguistic, media and social contexts. -- Dr Maureen Walsh


This an exciting publication that offers authentic approaches for educators to meet challenges of the literacy that students need in our evolving digital landscape. Cathy and Guy apply ongoing educational research to justify their proposal of a Charter for 21st Century Literacies . While acknowledging extant polarisations and tensions, the nine principles of their Charter are designed around specific pedagogical approaches that allow for the diversity of students, their environment and the media. Through each chapter the authors demonstrate the need for classrooms to enable creative, collaborative and experimental meaning making that draw on different elements of one's communication repertoire . Examples are offered to demonstrate the multidimensional potential of literacy across linguistic, media and social contexts. -- Dr Maureen Walsh This book is a great read for educators and folks concerned with the impact on digital technologies on young people's literacy learning. It grapples with all the main questions teachers are asking about how and whether to incorporate communication technologies into their curriculum. It offers a set of principles to consider when working with new media in the classroom, which are both ethical and pragmatic. Burnett and Merchant's writing is uncluttered, entertaining and wise. I can imagine teacher study groups, staff meetings and seminars organized around this very helpful book. While these authors are exploring new theoretical ground in their scholarship their treatment of this complex area is light, accessible and fresh. -- Barbara Comber In this significant new text, Cathy Burnett and Guy Merchant foreground the affective, embodied and emergent nature of making meaning with new media. They offer fascinating examples of children and young people engaged in improvising their way forwards as they compose and collaborate in different digital environments. Illuminating the playfulness and provisionality involved, the authors skilfully show teachers how to create space for such experimentation, enabling children to engage both creatively and critically in this digital age. -- Teresa Cremin Two established and innovative scholars partnered with classroom practitioners to generate new knowledge of how to support expansive meaning making for children in contemporary times-what's not to love? The book's pedagogical principles are essential and expertly explicated and illustrated. This book will be cherished by academics, students, and teachers. -- Rachel Heydon


This an exciting publication that offers authentic approaches for educators to meet challenges of the literacy that students need in our evolving digital landscape. Cathy and Guy apply ongoing educational research to justify their proposal of a Charter for 21st Century Literacies. While acknowledging extant polarisations and tensions, the nine principles of their Charter are designed around specific pedagogical approaches that allow for the diversity of students, their environment and the media. Through each chapter the authors demonstrate the need for classrooms to enable creative, collaborative and experimental meaning making that draw on different elements of one's communication repertoire. Examples are offered to demonstrate the multidimensional potential of literacy across linguistic, media and social contexts.--Dr Maureen Walsh This book is a great read for educators and folks concerned with the impact on digital technologies on young people's literacy learning. It grapples with all the main questions teachers are asking about how and whether to incorporate communication technologies into their curriculum. It offers a set of principles to consider when working with new media in the classroom, which are both ethical and pragmatic. Burnett and Merchant's writing is uncluttered, entertaining and wise. I can imagine teacher study groups, staff meetings and seminars organized around this very helpful book. While these authors are exploring new theoretical ground in their scholarship their treatment of this complex area is light, accessible and fresh. --Barbara Comber In this significant new text, Cathy Burnett and Guy Merchant foreground the affective, embodied and emergent nature of making meaning with new media. They offer fascinating examples of children and young people engaged in improvising their way forwards as they compose and collaborate in different digital environments. Illuminating the playfulness and provisionality involved, the authors skilfully show teachers how to create space for such experimentation, enabling children to engage both creatively and critically in this digital age. --Teresa Cremin Two established and innovative scholars partnered with classroom practitioners to generate new knowledge of how to support expansive meaning making for children in contemporary times--what's not to love? The book's pedagogical principles are essential and expertly explicated and illustrated. This book will be cherished by academics, students, and teachers.--Rachel Heydon


Author Information

Cathy Burnett is Professor of Literacy and Education at Sheffield Institute of Education, Sheffield Hallam University where she leads the Language and Literacy in Education Research Group. Her research interests focus on relationships between technology, literacy and education. A previous editor of Literacy, she has published widely in the areas of literacy, technology and education, including the co-edited collections New Literacies around the Globe: policy and pedagogy (2014), Literacy, Media, Technology: past, present and future (2017) and The case of the iPad: Mobile literacies in education (2017).  She is President Elect of the United Kingdom Literacy Association.    Guy Merchant is Professor of Literacy and Education at Sheffield Institute of Education, Sheffield Hallam University. He specialises in research into digital literacy and the inter-relations between children and young people, and new technologies of communication. He is widely published in international journals and is a founding editor of the Journal of Early Childhood Literacy. The ground-breaking Web 2.0 for Schools was co-authored with Julia Davies, and he has since co-edited a number of collections including Virtual Literacies (2013), New Literacies around the Globe (2014),  Literacy, media, technology: past, present, future  (2017) and The Case  of the iPad (2017). He is active in literacy education and professional work, including writing curriculum materials and professional publications.

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