14 Matching Annotations
  1. Feb 2021
    1. aménagement physique

      Intéressant de penser à l'aménagement physique lors d'une pandémie qui pousse les apprenants hors des lieux physiques conçus pour l'apprentissage et vers un aménagement physique de l'espace familial.

  2. May 2019
    1. Jenae Cohn

      You can also follow Jenae on Twitter.

    2. help students become expert learners

      Yes! The overall goal is to empower students to have agency over their digital fluency, not just enable them to use this or that software or technique.

    3. different applications and platforms

      Yes! For example: practice in using spreadsheets in general, rather than just what to click on in a single product like MS Excel.

    4. instructional designers are key players

      And maybe librarians, who along with IDs are well-placed to work across curricula and embed digital literacies practices strategically?

    5. literacies

      Yay! I love the plural form in all cases. There is always more than one "literacy".

    6. it is not always clear where students go to access training for these skills

      Like with writing, digital literacies/skills/fluency should be incorporated across the curriculum.

    7. The norms, applications, and protocols required to engage in digital research, reading, and writing require explicit instruction.

      Yes! If we expect students to do something, we should devote learning time to helping them learn how/advance their knowledge.

    8. ability to leverage technology to create new knowledge, new challenges, and new problems and to complement these with critical thinking, complex problem solving, and social intelligence to solve the new challenges

      Another definition of digital literacy, recast as digital fluency.

    9. shorthand for the myriad social practices and conceptions of engaging in meaning making mediated by texts that are produced, received, distributed, exchanged etc., via digital codification

      A definition of digital literacy.

    10. Device ownership alone doesn't make people digitally literate

      A key point: a lot of people might have technology, but that doesn't mean they have built up knowledge and skills about how it works or how to do things with it.

  3. Mar 2018
  4. Feb 2016
    1. In higher education, the BYOD movement addresses the same reality; many students are entering the classroom with their own devices, which they use to connect to the institutions’ networks.

      Hypothesis needs a robust mobile strategy to accommodate these users.

  5. Aug 2015
    1. Individualism–

      Customisation: the “personal” era. What with “personal learning networks” and everything “self-”. Does sound like a major trend. What’s possibly most interesting, though, is the framing. To some of us, the term “individualism” may carry some negative connotations. It could be fairly neutral, in a context like this one, or deemed positive (prefixed with “rugged”), but it’s an interesting choice, here.