Is the book on the way out?
April 24, 2009 by gaildyer
Just a few thoughts after listening to Kathleen Blake Yancey, reading Writing in the 21st Century and Will Richardson’s commentary.
The concept of connective writing is not about the act of publishing it is what happens before and after publication.
Reading and writing now, are not what they were.
They were:
- Reading to inform, teach and indoctrinate.
- Writing was for the few, the elite of the literatii.
Now they are skills used by all. They are vital elements for
- Personalisation and establishing relationships based on trust and with respect between readers/writers as the basis for interaction across the web.
- Self sponsored learning and we need to help our students to get to this stage.
What will be the life span of the printed page word? It is in doubt because the printed word is not as easily accessible when compared to the fast flexibility that is provided in the www environment.
Writing is ubiquitous . . . it doesn’t have to be DONE at a particular time in a particular context.
It happens any where any time when the mood strikes, the link or the connection is made.
Connective writing stems from what we read because ideas for writing have beginnings in what people have read. Others’ thoughts and ideas are reflected upon and writing is then produced.
Sceptics question the quality and preciseness of the information. The audience requires quality and preciseness and they will ensure ideas are fine tuned and written in a knowledgeable way as knowledge is no longer the domain of the few. It is outside of us all. It exists in the world in the space of the www.
Writers on the web synthesise their ideas and link them to sources and context. Writing has to be linked. It cannot occur in isolation. It has little meaning if isolated, unlinked and unread.
What does linked writing look like? Look at Borderland.
Publishing is a cyclical process? It is not only writing it is reading. Is the way we read being changed by our www experiences? Teachers who know their students and observe the way they work in a classroom can tell you reading for the students of today is a different more complex skill than it was even 20 year ago. The NCTE has endeavoured to address this with their recent NCTE Definition of 21st century literacies.
Do online readers use the same reading strategies as a paper reader?
Is literacy more dependant on images than words?
Is reading as we have been taught and tested still relevant?
What strategies are there to teach reading in an online world?
How do we use web 2.0 and blend it with the best of pedagogy to ensure our students learning needs are met?
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