assignments as controversies: getting 'under the hood' of how students write

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Assignments as Controversies Getting ‘under the hood’ of how students write Image taken from Bhatt (2017a) @ibrar_bhatt ibrarspace.net [email protected] EATAW Conference Mon 19 June 2017 Royal Holloway University Dr Ibrar Bhatt Lecturer in Education

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Page 1: Assignments as controversies: getting 'under the hood' of how students write

Assignments as Controversies

Getting ‘under the hood’ of how students write

Image taken from Bhatt (2017a)

@ibrar_bhatt

ibrarspace.net

[email protected]

EATAW ConferenceMon 19 June 2017

Royal Holloway University

Dr Ibrar BhattLecturer in Education

Page 2: Assignments as controversies: getting 'under the hood' of how students write

Why are assignments controversies?

• Important yet ‘black-boxed’ educational moments

• Interactions between ‘actors’ both within and beyond the immediate scene

•Examining student writing in process allows us to see how digital literacy actually ‘happens’ vs how it is understood in policy

Page 3: Assignments as controversies: getting 'under the hood' of how students write

Controversies

Page 4: Assignments as controversies: getting 'under the hood' of how students write

Literacy as social practice

Literacies are:

• Experienced within specific contexts

• Attached to professions, communities, and places

• Part of particular cultural histories

• Mediated by material objects and technologies

Therefore, to understand Literacies, you need a thorough exploration of contexts wherein writing occurs.

To engage with Literacy becomes a form of critical social inquiry

See Barton & Hamilton (2000)

Page 5: Assignments as controversies: getting 'under the hood' of how students write

All writing practices have a constellation of social practices surrounding them.

Photo by ibrar bhatt https://www.flickr.com/photos/87248369@N03/32967559021/in/dateposted-public/

Page 6: Assignments as controversies: getting 'under the hood' of how students write

• The digital literacy practices of students as they work on their assignments?

• How these practices relate to the students’ everyday digital literacies and habits with technology?

• Discrepancies between the way students carry out their written work, and the requirements and expectations of the course and, more broadly, the college?

Points of inquiry

Page 7: Assignments as controversies: getting 'under the hood' of how students write

A note on methods

Technological developments

Evolution in research methods

New understandings of literacy

Page 8: Assignments as controversies: getting 'under the hood' of how students write

Methods

1. Observations of the college sites

2. Videography:

1. Multidimensional screen recordings

2. Video logs

3. Dynamic transcript

4. Analytic vignettes (see Bhatt et al. 2015 and Bhatt 2017b for a detailed discussion)

3. Post-assignment interviews with participatory activity (Venn diagrams)

Page 9: Assignments as controversies: getting 'under the hood' of how students write

[slide with pics and screen shots]

Page 10: Assignments as controversies: getting 'under the hood' of how students write

Image from Bhatt (2017b)

Page 11: Assignments as controversies: getting 'under the hood' of how students write

Findings

Structuring agency of policy documents spell out (and limit ) the purpose and scope for using digital media in the classroom, and in the college generally

Agency of online actors shape the knowledge creation

Capricious violations of these by the students

Assignments are heavily curated, with content from various sources. This curation is central to the writing process but hinges on certain skills (e.g. discernment)

Links to past writing, e.g. the utilisation of previous work

Links to future writing, e.g. embedding Twitter

Tasks within tasks, like matryushkas

The flow of practices: irruption

Page 12: Assignments as controversies: getting 'under the hood' of how students write

Final points

What it means to be digitally literate is always in flux.

It should be based on a detailed explication of localised practice.

Researching digital literacy using a ‘social practice’ approach helps us to look at the funds of knowledge that learners bring to their writing tasks.

Focusing a lens on student practices as the locus of inquiry allows us to see how both knowledge (and ignorance) are related to a person’s digital literacy practices.

Page 13: Assignments as controversies: getting 'under the hood' of how students write

References:

BARTON, D. & HAMILTON, M. (2000) Literacy Practices. In: BARTON, D., HAMILTON, M. & IVANIC, R. (eds.) Situated literacies: reading and writing in context. London: Routledge. 7-15

BHATT, I. (2017a). Assignments as controversies: digital literacy and writing in classroom practice, Routledge Research in Literacy

BHATT, I. (2017b) ‘Classroom digital literacies as interactional accomplishments’, In Researching New Literacies: Design, Theory, and Data in Sociocultural Investigation, Knobel, M. and Lankshear, C. (eds.), New York: Peter Lang. pp. 127-149

BHATT, I, DE ROOCK, R & ADAMS, J. (2015). Diving deep into digital literacy: emerging methods for research, Language and Education, Vol. 29 (6), 477-492

Page 14: Assignments as controversies: getting 'under the hood' of how students write

Dr Ibrar Bhatt

Lecturer in Education

@ibrar_bhatt

[email protected]

ibrarspace.net