Buch, Englisch, 304 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 240 mm
Buch, Englisch, 304 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 240 mm
ISBN: 978-1-85604-563-6
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
This collection brings together a global community of educators, educational researchers, librarians and IT strategists, to consider how learners need to be equipped in an educational environment that is increasingly suffused with digital technology. Traditional notions of literacy need to be challenged, and new literacies, including information literacy and IT literacy, need to be considered as foundation elements for digitally involved learners. Leading international experts from the USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Mexico and throughout Europe contribute to the debate, and Hannelore Rader, Librarian and Dean of the University Libraries, University of Louisville, Kentucky, provides the foreword. The book is in two parts:
In Part 1, Literacies in the Digital Age, the contributors analyse how digital technologies have enabled transformative change in the ways in which learning can be constructed, and discuss the nature of the new literacies that have emerged in this new virtual and e-learning environment.
In Part 2, Enabling and Supporting Digital Literacies, the contributors go on to consider the ways in which digital literacies can be made available to learners, and how these literacies are being relocated in a more student-centred environment within the broader perspective of learning.
Readership: This book takes the issues raised in the successful Information and IT Literacy, also co-edited by Allan Martin, into a broader context. It is essential reading for all information professionals and educators involved in developing strategies and practices for learning in a digital age.
Zielgruppe
Professional Practice & Development
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Foreword - Hannelore Rader PART 1: LITERACIES 1. Literacies for the digital age: preview of Part 1 - Allan Martin 2. Learners, learning literacy and the pedagogy of e-learning - Terry Mayes and Chris Fowler 3. Real learning in virtual environments - Johannes Cronjé 4. Digital fusion: defining the intersection of content and communications - Paul Gilster 5. Literacy and the digital knowledge revolution - Claire Bélisle 6. Understanding e-literacy - Maryann Kope 7. Information literacy – an overview - Ola Pilerot 8. Contemporary literacy – the three Es - David F. Warlick 9. Reconceptualizing media literacy for the digital age - Renee Hobbs 10. Literacy, e-literacy and multiliteracies: meeting the challenges of teaching online - Chris Sutton 11. Graduate e-literacies and employability - Denise Haywood, Jeff Haywood, and Hamish Macleod PART 2: ENABLING AND SUPPORTING DIGITAL LITERACIES 12. Supporting and enabling digital literacy in a global environment: preview of Part 2 - Dan Madigan 13. A ‘dense symphony of the nation’: Cymru Ar-Lein and e-citizens and e-communities in Wales - Stephen Griffiths 14. The impact of information competencies on socio-economic development in Southern Hemisphere economies - Jesús Lau 15. Supporting students in e-learning - Martin Jenkins 16. The information commons: a student-centred environment for IT and information literacy development - Hester Mountifield 17. Socio-cultural approaches to literacy and subject knowledge development in learning management systems - Neil Anderson 18. Approaches to enabling digital literacies: successes and failures - Alex Reid 19. Professional development and graduate students: approaches to technical and information competence - Catherine Cardwell 20. Windward in an asynchronous world: the Antiguan initiative, unanticipated pleasure of the distance learning revolution - Cornel J. Reinhart 21. A tale of two courses - Gill Needham and David Murphy