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"Honey is sweet, and so is knowledge, but knowledge is like the bee that made that sweet honey, you have to chase it through the pages of a book!" Thank You Mr. Falker by Patricia Pollaco
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
We can write that?The blurry line between producing
photo courtesy of flickr: Technology part of our lifestyle
I have been struggling as of lately with the lines between speaking, writing and representing within my practice. In my writer's workshop, I have the students busy innovating and creating different pieces based on different purposes for literacy.
What I'm finding, though, and a case could be made for the digital native and immigrant argument, is that so many of my kids are blowing open the idea of writing. They wish to create, and since technology is so embedded in my practice, they are creating what they want - and aren't fettered by the old notions that are limited by a paper and pencil narrative.
With the ipod touch in hand, yesterday I had a student ask if he could video a memo. I faltered, then thought: why not - since you have the technology. My only constraint was that he needed to work on the feedback I had given him after the initial writing assessment. If he needed to work on further developing his ideas within his plan, to prepare him for more sophisticated paragraphs, then why not construct a video... construct being the most important word here.
When students are creating, they are no longer limited by the paper narrative. Revisions are happening in real time, with ease, without the cumbersome draft after draft, redundancy not-wth-standing, motif, masquerading as improving writing (when really it more frustrating). I'm finding that kids are no longer re-creating the paper and pencil products on the computer, but more intuitively using the tools to create - rather than being dictated by the tool. They are starting with the product. Yeah!
Photo courtesy of Flickr: Interconnected Chain with One Odd Link
This causes me problems when addressing the Interconnected expectation in the language document. I have to get my students to think about their skills in the different literacy areas, and the connections between them. However, I can no longer draw a simple line for my students. I cannot clearly distinguish for them the work that we do in the writer's workshop is writing, and not speaking or representing (a media message - media literacy, the production part). For them, they are quickly becoming one and the same. In a video that was produced, the students used speaking skills to deliver a message. They used their writing skills to develop the plan and write the script. They used their representation skills by filming the video, thinking about lighting, backgrounds, music, etc.
In theory (having not attempted this yet), this should be a bit easier for them to see how the skills are transferrable to the other literacy areas. The trouble I forsee is that they won't be able to see the different literacy areas as truly different.
Truly, with the lines blurring, producing content is becoming very exciting!
M.
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