2. 1 Goals
• Digital Skills – Why?
• How to develop students’
DL skills?
3.
4. • UNESCO, European Commission,
Council of Europe, governments
have been underlining the
importance of digital skills
International
institutions
• We need to prepare students for
real life; employers are looking for
highly skilled people
Jobs
• Innovation and/with creativity
• Pedagogical challenge: how to do
that?
Value to the
Education
Digital Skills: Why?
6. Digital Literacy
How can we understand
these concepts?
Information Literacy
Media Literacy
Media Education
7. “The school and the family
share the responsibility of
preparing the young person
for living in a world of
powerful images, words
and sounds.” (UNESCO, 1982)
UNESCO
Grunwald Declaration
on Media Education
1982
EU
A European approach to
media literacy in the digital
2007
“Media literacy is defined
as the ability to access,
understand, critically
evaluate and create media
content.” (A European approach to
media literacy in the digital environment
[COM(2007) 833)
16. Digital
Participants
• The new forms of writing should
also become the "requirement of
every person" (Cantoni & Tardini,
2008: 30), because – following
the metaphor of writing – using
digital media is similar to
someone who can read but
cannot write.
18. Conclusions
lost in the
concepts?
• Building a consensus on
language
• More than nomenclatures, is
what they enunciate and what
they value
• Using theoretical approach to
make things happen
Complexity and limitations of the concepts
A very pragmatic approach to theory
O Collected around 8o documents produced or spnosored by theses 3 institutions.
How can we make sense of these concepts?
Can you find any caracteristic that shows the diferrences between them
It’s not as simple as that
Literacy
The relation with information is essential in digital literacy. This complex
Searching: students should know different sources of information (scientific platforms; a job website…)
Creating
Organizing
Using ethically
Sharing (ethically and safely)
Filing / collecting (great amounts of data)
Curating
Labeling
Using for research purposes, as well as for personal uses, such as traveling
Creating and managing communities connected by a specific interest
Creating messages with impact
Disseminating (artistic content; political messages…)
Presenting
This is essential. So congratulations for having this position. I think it is really innovative and strategic.
Do you consider you re implmenting
We should ask ouserlves where does it come from, this need of mapping
Obviously it is part of any research, but I can show that even though after more than 30 years after the unesco declarition we still don’t have the field well definied.
Probable it’s because we have been facing so many and fast changes in the the media ladscape.
BTW, I undestrandn that we need maps but I rely enjoy to get lost and find new places and make the connections and bridges by my own
On the other sie, we shouldn’t trust maps because sometimes they don’t consider all the details
Destaco só que é bom ter mapas – mas talvez nem sempre esses mapas serão o espelho fiel ou fiãvel do terreno
Pessoalmente… A importância de se perder para descobrir novos lugares, eventualmente escondidos (fazer ligacoes entre pontos sem ser de metro)
LinkedIn as portfolio
LinkedIn as portfolio
In this discussion, it is important not to lose sight of the essential, that is to build a consensus on language that will further develop the area, because ultimately "more than nomenclatures, is what they enunciate and what they value" (Pinto et al, 2011: 20). And there is another important point: how can we build on this theoretical approach, practical initiatives able to develop digital skills? This is the reason underneath the initiative that is the focus of this chapter.
So this Cratography should be an issue – this is my pragmatic approach.