2.26.2009

What {I remember from what} I would have {ugh} Twittered:

1) I overheard a woman angrily crying on a cell phone. She said, "This is what you always do! You're doing it right now!" Time and space were hers through the technology she was crying into. Fights in the third space.

2) Announced my engagement through Facebook. So much easier than calling people! Horrible? Maybe. No one got told first though!

3) Read about Snark, by D. Denby. If you have thirty minutes read the whole book, but don't give up good reading time for it if you haven't got it. Internet = convenience for faceless, meaningless attacks without conviction.

4) Bloggers and Unions Join Forces to Push Democrats to Left

I get all a'twitter (If only McLuhan could have had an iPhone)

So I have to admit, as constraining as I find Twitter to be, I love its novelty, how it forces clarity (or highlights a lack thereof), and the kind of compulsion it can become.

With Twitter, you can stay hyper–connected to your friends and always know what they’re doing. Or, you can stop following them any time. You can even set quiet times on Twitter so you’re not interrupted.

Twitter puts you in control and becomes a modern antidote to information overload.

The only aspect Twitter can control though is your reception; you alone are responsible for your impulse control. Just peek at the reasons to use to Twitter:

Why [use the service]? Because even basic updates are meaningful to family members, friends, or colleagues—especially when they’re timely.

  • Eating soup? Research shows that moms want to know.
  • Running late to a meeting? Your co–workers might find that useful.
  • Partying? Your friends may want to join you.
I eat soup all the time! Sometimes I eat really good soup! Soup my friends like too! Well, I'll never have to eat soup in secrecy again. I know I'm being flippant, but I completely enjoy the fact that Twitter takes itself in such great stride that it includes "Eating soup?" under basic, but meaningful updates. Twitter can control when my friends get these meaningful newsflashes, but who can control my thumbs when I find something to be meaningful?

In all seriousness, the reason I started on Twitter is that I have a few times this week been dying to post things that I saw as I saw them. I felt paralyzed by my fear I'd forget. I thought, I should type this out in a note to myself, or I should text myself, or "Gee, we'd use Twitter!" Not once did I trust that I'd remember these instances on my own (nor did I once actually record these instances, either), and I began to think about myself and the effects of the new electronic media.

Take for example, my phone. It covers e-mail, internet, texting, phone, notes/to-do list, music, audiobooks, games, radio, weather, GPS, and clock and calendar. In this way, the technology enhances my ability to get things done and it carries my personal media. The news, music, my calendar and more are all amplified through this medium. But at what loss? What media have been reduced? Books and planners. Music players. Navigation system. Sometimes, maybe even the personal computer, as I've been known to sit at my desk at work and read my email on my phone as I sit in front of my Dell.

I may not have lost a modality, in the traditional way in which a radio replaces the visual, but I've lost a sense of patience I think. My phone makes a sound, I need to see what it is. I use different sounds to signify different things, so I know before I even see my phone that I have a text message, e-mail, or call from a specific person with a specific ring tone. Have I been prepped by previous technologies and their immediacy (from the ringing phone to the friendly "You've Got Mail!") to seek out a singular device that can fulfill my technological and communicative needs? What has my phone returned to the forefront of my life? My connections with others, my need for instant gratification, the visual of a website when I'm sitting in a doctor's office waiting room, audio when I'm on a train. But my consciousness of what is being sent to me is increased simply by being notified, am I really more conscious? I don't remember that I've read an e-mail because I've read it so quickly and didn't have time to respond. I'm no more conscious of my friend's birthday when I know that my Facebook application will tell me when it is coming and I can let that small fact slip out of my mind after I write something on her wall. I'm much less conscious of the environment around me, physically if I'm going to trip over myself while texting between train transfers, and emotionally in public settings while I'm writing to a long lost friend or angry family member.

Well, this is where my mind went a few times when I sat on the train, walked by Union Square, read the newspaper this week and thought "I don't have time to a blog fair justice this week, I just want to write up something about . . . " Similarly, there are times when I really can't imagine engaging my mom when I get from work, but I would love for her to know I'm still getting my soup.

[Finally, Twitter. Verb? I'd hate to think so, but it pains me even more to know that my repeated use of the phrase "use Twitter's services" most likely read pretty awkwardly. I can't quite accept it just yet. I'm sorry.]

2.16.2009

Which is often glossed over . . .

Crystal's mention of the etymological roots of CC (as carbon copy), followed by the phrase "which is often glossed over as courtesy copy" really stuck with me. When the archaeologists review my mother's office, they will find the artifact "carbon paper," the predecessor to "carbonless copy paper," and something that has no need in a world without type writers or high demand for handwritten forms. Teachers scoff at the warnings to use a ballpoint pen when completing Individualized Education Plans "in triplicate" because now they are 1) typed, 2) printed and 3) photocopied.

And as much as we try to gloss over the roots of the CC and BCC lines in our email headers, we are still very much stuck in the tenets of formal letter writing. When an email header identifies the date, the sender and the recipient, why are we so concerned with greetings and salutations? Are these stylistic artifacts harder to gloss over?

2.12.2009

I work at The Academy of Innovative Technology, a new small public school in Brooklyn. We have access to two computer labs and the SMARTBoards were installed this week. There is a traveling computer cart, and each classroom has one computer. This is technology, though its innovation is still subject to question. The true innovation lies with how its instruction centers around teaching to specialist certificate programs, as it is a Career and Technical Education (CTE) school, but at the end of the day, people want to "see" technology in lesson planning and physical spaces. Reading in the Barton that writing is a form that REQUIRES technology repositioned the concept of technology for me momentarily.

This pause brings to mind ideas that question access and affordance, but more deeply, causes me to question the practical uses of technology. What is the purpose of technology in the classroom? Is simply typing an assignment in a word processing document an effective use of technology? Typed papers always look so great, but is this the best use of technology we can muster in the educational system?

Recently when choosing a reading assessment, I was asked to select one that "used technology." Is this the best qualifier for instructional decisions? Thinking of all of the technology, or implements and instruments, that can be used for a test, are pencil-and-paper exams, scantron bubbles, or computer-based programs necessarily better than a portfolio or oral report, or do they feel more "advanced" in their use of technology?

I suppose I have many questions as I read through these texts, and I'm refocusing a lot of what I do every day through this new lens. What I wanted to do most was go through a day and list the times I've read, hoping to note the "technology" I've used. This is a rough idea, though I'm sure the list is endless:

  • Time - Alarm Clock
  • Weather Ticker - Television News
  • Notice in Elevator - Printed Paper
  • Coffee Menu - Printed Sign
  • Metro (News Paper) - Printed Text
  • Time - Digital Sign in Subway
  • Advertisement - Printed Signs in Subway
  • Email - iPhone
  • Email - Desktop
  • Assessment Information - Website, Desktop
  • Student Scores - Excel Spreadsheet, Printed
  • Student Work - Pen/Pencil on Paper
  • Pattern Book - Printed Pages, Bound Text
  • Text Message - iPhone
  • Desk Clearing - Printed Papers
  • Computer Menus - Word, Excel, Photoshop, Firefox, Internet Explorer

2.04.2009

Responses from 02.02.09 Class

Models of Literacy
1 Discuss Brian Street’s argument regarding two models of literacy that have been prevalent in educative contexts: the autonomous model and the ideological model. Come up with some traditional examples of ways in which the autonomous model has been applied in different contexts and for different groups attaining literacy. What are the consequences of the autonomous model? How would an ideological model describe these same contexts?
By different pathways, we all came to the idea of Dewey's school house and experiential learning. Another point we all expressed made it clear we knew that Street's ideological model does not run parallel, or as an alternative, to the autonomous model. In fact, in the same way that literacy can be divorced from the other factors of society, an autonomous or skills-based model cannot be instructed in a vacuum. It almost is as if the ideology of a society (its taboos and totems, what is given privilege or held in a lower regard) can not be stripped from the language and the power entrenched within it. It is clear then that these ideals cannot be taken from the instruction and use of literacy and related skills either.

Literacy is experiential, and experiences are shaped in many way the structures and ideologies of society. The style of speaking, the types of text read, the mannerisms that demonstrate listening, and the ways and reasons to write. These skills can only be taught if they are matched to the student's readiness, which is often a product of their life and educational experiences. Additionally, experiences and ideologies shape the opportunities for transference of literacy skills, which reinforce the rightness or wrongness of the literary act. The ideological model speaks to access to literacy events to learning, practicing and engaging skills.

2 Baron does not raise issues of power/control (i.e., an important factor within an ideological model of literacy) in describing different forms (genres) of online communication. Can you predict some issues of power underlying these forms that may arise later in the book?
The issues of affordance and access for me go beyond the material means of participating in dialogue. It is as if the issue is black or white: does the child have access to a form of technology. There are shades of grey in between having and not having that are crucial, and when ignored, paint a picture that those that have have equally.

The expectations of what should be had by whom are influenced by the ideologies of society. The use of the same tools can be seen differently when used by different people, or different models of similar devices can be viewed with bias as well. The student in school using video editing software may be seen as a model to his peers, while a twentysomething editing videos for YouTube may be seen as a less than admirable. Three colleagues checking their work email on a Treo, Blackberry or iPhone may face quite different responses based solely on the expected use of their devices. Even the quality of the same tools can be unequal: it is common for an urban public school in a low socioeconomic neighborhood to have second-hand or previous generation tools.

Are these no less issues of affordances because there is access? There are socioeconomic and sociopolitical ideologies at the heart of issues of what is afforded to society's members. Access must be weighed by more than a dividing line.

Features of online communication: a start
3 I suggest that another way of comparing different forms (or different genres) of online communication is through the lenses of interactivity (more engaging and dynamic) and retrievability (ability to re-visit what has already been communicated in order to reflect and respond). We could apply these aspects of language to the examination of these genres and then consider the educational consequences of their use.
Teachers enjoy making marks and maintaining content for second and third glances, which would highlight the merits of retrievability when using technology for educational purposes. There is a sense that fleeting moments are not quite as educational, which may be understood as not as easily graded, stored in a binder, or revisted at parent-teacher conferences. One topic discussed in our group specifically was the benefit to record-keeping through technology, both in keeping grades and tracking email. However, these are not the educational acts, but rather means of interpreting, reflecting upon, revisiting or assessing these acts.

Perhaps moving towards options that are less retrievable may be part of the shift towards assessment and learning that can be deeper than traditional projects and assignments. While the first incorporation of online communication had come in the form of using the internet as a means of transporting traditionally read and written content, as in emailing assignments, recorded voices, and discussion boards, there is room for integration of more. Interactivity will follow first with availability, and then, if the expectations of online commmunication and its educational uses can shift, beyond retrievability.