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NetFamilyNews.org Literacy for a digital age: Transliteracy or what?

Digital literacy educator Diana Graber is crowdsourcing a media literacy curriculum for 8th-graders at Journey School in southern California. Its Year 3 of the schools CyberCivics program that Dianas building, she writes in the CyberWise blog. Reading her resource-rich post got me thinking about all Ive learned about digital literacy, media literacy, and social literacy since I first heard them mentioned in the same breath at the Safer Internet Forum in Luxembourg in 2009. So maybe Diana wont mind if this member of the crowd weighs in. Blended literacy needed for a digital age Though the terms used at the Luxembourg conference were technology skills, media skills, and life skills, the speakers were clearly talking about three literacies, and the third was used interchangeably with social literacy. This formed the kernel of my thinking on the subject of literacy as one of five components of citizenship in a digital age (the way being informed and literate has been central to citizenship for centuries see below and Slide 2 here). Zooming in on the literacy part of citizenship As I listened to my European colleagues, it made complete sense to me that in a media environment thats both digital and social, where media are incoming (consumable), outgoing (producible, spreadable), and often collective or expressive of community (shareable, remixable) literacy has to include technical, social, and information-handling skills. Its truly a 3-legged stool, not very useful without all three legs. That its a blend wasnt only being seen in Europe, however. Media professor Henry Jenkins and the New Media Literacies Project he started at MIT (now theyre both at the University of Southern California) put forth 12 literacies or social skills and cultural competencies needed in participatory media and culture back in 2006, including some involving interaction or collaboration (more on this in a minute). In Canada, my friend and colleague Jane Tallim at MediaSmarts.ca told me, educators teach multiliteracies or digital literacies, positioning digital literacy not as a concrete set of skills, but as a framework that draws from and expands on numerous literacies and competencies that traditionally fall under media literacy technology literacy, information literacy, visual literacy, communication literacy and social literacies to reflect both the social and digital dimensions of networked technologies. All of these seem to fit somewhere into the three categories of digital, media, and social, though, dont you think? But is this blend transliteracy? When I ran this idea of a blended literacy by a brilliant librarian friend of mine, he said I was talking about transliteracy: the ability to read, write and interact across a range of platforms, tools and media. That definitions from Prof. Sue Thomas at De Montfort University in the UK. But I suggest that digital/media/social literacy even goes beyond embracing all media, platforms, and technologies to covering both incoming and outgoing, or behavioral, media (consumable, producible, and shareable media). I certainly agree with proponents who say that transliteracy is concerned with what it means to be literate in the 21st century and with the interaction among text literacy and visual literacy and digital literacy, as Tom Ipry at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas wrote in Introducing Transliteracy, but there doesnt seem to be enough emphasis on the literacy required by the interaction of users themselves in media as an environment itself in other words, within the social media environments (including text-messaging

conversations on phones) in which people of all ages now spend a great deal of their lives. Thats what makes social literacy so essential now. The New Media Literacies project covers several skills needed for participating in collaboration and community but it doesnt go as far as embracing the self-management and self- and social-awareness skills of SEL that constitute social literacy. When people hopefully students in school, which is often their first sustained experience of community and where citizenship is introduced at an early age learn to detect and manage emotions wherever they are, online or offline (blending this understanding with digital and media literacy in online environments), we will go far in learning how to function effectively in all forms of community: homes, classrooms, chatrooms, online games, virtual worlds, etc. [As a welcome bonus, SEL represents the lion's share of bullying and cyberbullying prevention, so not only does it increase academic success, it protects and increases social efficacy as well, I have learned from psychologists this past year.] Embedded in citizenship We hear so much about digital citizenship and literacy as two separate things, but thats only if citizenship is seen as a behavioral practice. I think that demeans citizenship. I propose that this blended literacy of a digital age is part of digital citizenship, one of the five elements Ive seen and heard references to in research and forums in a number of countries: Participation or civic engagement Norms of behavior (often referred to as good citizenship) Rights & responsibilities* A sense of belonging or membership The literacies digital, media, social Can we really be effective citizens, online and offline, without all five elements? In fact, I think it wont be long before we drop the digital part of digital citizenship because well see digital as just one of many places where citizens engage with their world (youth already see it that way see this). I hope it wont be long before were teaching, modeling and practicing citizenship together in digital environments within classrooms, as much as extended families are doing now in Facebook all the time. Just as, consciously or not, parents are modeling online participation for their kids in digital settings, so teachers and students can do so for each other in digital settings such as class blogs, wikis, cellphone activities, and virtual environments at school (in classroom settings, I suggest that the progression for using digital media goes from student engagement to civic engagement to civic efficacy online and offline). Just as its a whole lot easier to teach and practice cooking in a kitchen, its a whole lot easier to teach and practice digital citizenship in digital environments. As that happens more and more in schools, digital citizenship will increasingly take off (and wont be such a hot topic in online-safety forums anymore because blended into all aspects of school life). So to summarize, here are what I propose to be the three parts of todays tri-literacy: 1. Media literacy is the piece that has been developed by generations of scholars and educators. As a third of this tri-literacy, it doesnt change much from what it was in the mass-media era and is now needed even more as we face a growing tsunami of 24/7 media that can be either professionally or user-produced. Its basically information literacy critical thinking applied to whats incoming, downloadable or consumable, regardless of media type or whether it appears in a book, on a phone, or on a computer screen. It employs some new skills such as fluency in Web search, critical judgment of what searches turn up, and recognizing social engineering online but the cognitive filter it develops still tests for accuracy and credibility while protecting from the likes of phishers, social engineers, and identity thieves as well as specious content, hate speech, and negative

influencing. 2. Digital literacy goes beyond technical skills to include not only fluency in the use of digital media (e.g, skills such as blogging, which builds on various forms of writing, and sound and video producing and editing) but also in computer, network, reputation, identity, and intellectual-property security. It works closely with media literacy and social literacy in its understanding of the social engineering that makes phishing and malicious hacking the threats that they have become. 3. Social literacy is greatly needed in social media, we all know. If we all grew up with socialemotional learning, wed have greater academic success and social skills and a lot less bullying in schools and workplaces. And if we applied those emotion management and empathy skills to online spaces as much as offline ones, wed probably witness a lot less cyberbullying and other forms of online aggression (not to mention traditional bullying). Wed also probably have much less of a problem with disinhibition, the lack of visual cues that display our reactions to one another that can make us forget that those are fellow human beings with feelings behind the text messages, comments, avatars, etc. through which we communicate in digital spaces. The goal of developing this rich blended literacy in each citizen (of communities online and offline) is full, effective engagement in participatory media, culture, and society. Greater safety (emotional and physical as well as safety of digital, physical, financial, and intellectual property) is a welcome byproduct, as is success in academics, social experiences, professional work. Related links The fast track to new literacies is youth digital media production. When youth move from media consumers to media producers they develop 21st Century Learning Skills and Digital Literacies, wrote Barry Joseph. They also develop social literacy. Global Kids youth design games, produce movies (with the multiple skills involved), moderate online discussions, blog, etc.. After 12 years as director of Global Kids Online Leadership Program, Barry recently announced that he is moving on to serve as director of digital learning at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. What is social-emotional learning? from the Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning in Chicago Harvards Howard Gardner and USCs Henry Jenkins on How We Got Here (pdf) referring to their collaboration and that of their projects GoodPlays digital ethics project and the New Media Literacies project (NML), respectively which produced the free curriculum Our Space: Being a Responsible Citizen of the Digital World, described by NML as designed to encourage high school students to reflect on the ethical dimensions of their participation in new media environments. [Common Sense Media's curriculum is adapted from this collaborative project, but this is the original work.] About a year ago, like Diana Graber with media literacy, I suggested that we crowd-source digital citizenship because of its participatory nature. I do think that, all over the world, especially where people are connected to the global Internet and developing an unprecedented global consciousness, the definition of citizenship is evolving at a faster pace than before. Not in the sense of either world citizens or Internet citizens, but citizens of communities that are both online and offline, geographic and interest-based. Anti-social media companies will be obsolete (12/11) So what good is social media? (10/11) Survival of the most cooperative? (5/11) * Proposed rights & responsibilities of citizenship in a digital age (please comment, add, or edit): Rights access & participation, free speech, privacy, physical & psychological safety, safety of digital,

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