Posts Tagged reading

Writing While Reading

Writing While Reading
I write all over the pages of every book I read.  It helps me have a conversation with the author and allows me to keep track of my thinking while I am reading.  I would love to have a Web2.0 tool that allows me to highlight, underline, and take notes in the margins while reading online.  Is there any such tool available? I just read through  Alex Beam’s article I Screen, You Screen, We All Screen where he quotes Anne Mangen highlighting the differences of reading a traditional book compared to reading online.  She says:

The feeling of literally being in touch with the text is lost when your actions – clicking with the mouse, pointing on touch screens, or scrolling with keys or on touch pads – take place at a distance from the digital text, which is, somehow, somewhere inside the computer, the e-book, or the mobile phone.

I hear ya Anne!  If there is an online article or blog post that I really want to read deeply I will often print a hard copy so that I am able to write all over the paper.  If I don’t print off the article I will often highlight a section of the text, as if I am copying and pasting, which gives me a focus during the online reading experience.  It also gives me a specific purpose for using the mouse, it limits my scrolling, and seems to limit the distance between me and the digital text.  It’s not perfect but it helps my brain.

Tags: , ,

Fundamental Shifts in Literacy

How We Dream by Richard E. Miller

“We are living at the moment of the greatest change in human communication in human history.  We now have the capability of communicating instantly, globally.  This is the time to be engaged in the work of literacy. It has never been a more important moment for this profession or for people who take reading and writing seriously.”

I’m a teacher.  I love books,  the art of writing with well sharpened pencils, and pads of paper that are bit smaller than 8.5 x 11. I have an endless supply of sticky notes and more three ring binders than one human could ever want.  However, I am struck with the realization that my learning experiences and comfort in school may be completely irrelevant to any discussion of the education of today’s students, or my own children for that matter.

Richard Miller’s video succinctly illustrates the fundamental shifts in literacy that have taken place, and it will be up to those of us who are in the business of education to get comfortable navigating through this connected media in order to help prepare our digitally marinated students and children.  I on the other hand, have been paper trained therefor I have had to learn, and continue to learn, a new skill set and new digital language.

5:38

To create those spaces we need an extraordinary combination of resources that we do not have at this point.  We need inspiring teachers.  People who tell you they’re teaching visual literacy, I don’t think they’ve yet begun to deal with how profound this change is.  We do not have a pedagogy at hand to teach the kind of writing I am describing, it needs to be invented.  We need inspiring spaces and we need inspiring pedagogy’s.

We can do this – we need to do this – for my children and yours.

Amelia

Tags: , , ,