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buffy j. hamilton digital media, technology, teaching, children, and schools the hechinger institute on education and the media november 2011

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rewriting the story of libraries and learning communities through participatory culture and transliteracy

cc image via http://www.flickr.com/photos/yives/3392170068/sizes/z/in/faves-10557450@N04/

buffy j. hamiltondigital media, technology, teaching, children, and schools the hechinger institute on education and the medianovember 2011

a participation gap exists

“the more that the school organizes literacy teaching and learning to serve the needs of the economic system, the more it betrays its democratic possibilities” deborah brandt

vanishing boundaries

how do we disrupt what paulo freire terms the “banking” system of education that devalues

inquiry?

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how can educators harness the power of social media and new media literacies to close the gap and

grow each student’s cultural capital?

we can’t cultivate networked learners without putting pedagogy before tools

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how to create flexible and

fluid

learning spaces?

embedding ourselves in the lives and learning spaces of students

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participatory learning and

culture

transliteracy

constructed “text” of

libraries and learning

libraries as communal experiences and “commonplace” texts constructed by participants

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CC image via http://www.flickr.com/photos/beth19/4642532960/sizes/l/in/photostream/

library is the story

of the humanexperience

how are we helping students create conversations about multiple ways of reading and writing today’s world?

libraries as sites of the experience of self-excavation and discovery through learning

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Transliteracy is a “a convergence of literacies” (Lippincott, 2007: 17) as the boundaries between medial literacy, digital literacy, technology literacy and information literacy become blurred when individuals evolve from

consumers of information to producers of

content.

Dr. Susie AndrettaLondon Metropolitan University

Source: http://nlabnetworks.typepad.com/transliteracy/Andretta_Transliteracy.pdf and http://net.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ERM07610.pdf

“The most fundamental notion of transliteracy is the ability to adapt. It’s creating a literacy and fluiditybetween mediums that’s not tied to space or modality.”

Ryan Nadelfounder of 8 Leaf Digital Productions and an instructor at the Vancouver Film School

Source: http://spotlight.macfound.org/featured-stories/entry/what-is-this-buzz-word-transliteracy-a-qa-with-ryan-nadel/

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students and teachers contribute to conversations for learning through libraries

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Graphic used with permission from Dr. Barbara Stripling

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“It’s all about learning…how is this going to fundamentally enrich a conversation?

There isn’t a part of the library that isn’t about learning. Learning is a collaborative conversation.”

Dr. David LankesCC image via http://www.flickr.com/photos/marcwathieu/2980385784/sizes/l/in/faves-10557450@N04/

Participatory Librarianship and Change Agents: http://blip.tv/file/1566813

relatively low barriers to artistic expression and civic engagement

strong support for creating and sharing one’s creations with others

what is known by the most experienced ispassed along to novices

members believe that their contributions matter

members feel some degree of social connection with one another

participatory culture is a

catalyst

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a participatory climate amplifies the possibilities for creating conversations for learning via multiple

mediums

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connect to people via the sweet spot of attachment to libraries and learning through experiences and conversations

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it is not enough to capture their minds---you must capture

their hearts

traditional and emerging authoritative sources of authority

network and attention literacy

network and attention literacy

curation

collaborative learning and knowledge building

conversations via active reflection and metacognition

conversations via networked learning with experts around the world

inquiry, engagement, and collective intelligence face to face

inquiry, engagement, and collective intelligence via virtual mediums

portfolios

digital research “texts”

digital storytelling

digital citizenship and ethical use of information

mobile computing for learning

collection

spaces for honoring patron voices, expertise, and opinions

physical space

cc licensed photo by The Shifted Librarian: http://www.flickr.com/photos/shifted/3360687295/

shared story of “library”

enchantment is the nectarCC image via http://www.flickr.com/photos/da100fotos/490875588/sizes/o/in/photostream/

CC image via http://www.flickr.com/photos/brandoncwarren/4164759025/sizes/l/

likability

“enchantment transforms situations and relationships.”

Guy Kawasaki,

Enchantment: The Art of Changing Hearts, Minds, and Actions

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“No risk, no art. No art, no reward.”

Seth GodinCC image via http://www.flickr.com/photos/pure9/2606460947/sizes/o/Seth Godin, September 2010 http://bit.ly/9Vkh1K

contact information

buffy.hamilton@gmail.comhttp://theunquietlibrarian.wordpress.comhttp://buffyjhamilton.wordpress.com@buffyjhamilton

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