Prelims
Best Practices in Teaching Digital Literacies
ISBN: 978-1-78754-434-5, eISBN: 978-1-78754-551-9
ISSN: 2048-0458
Publication date: 17 September 2018
Citation
(2018), "Prelims", Ortlieb, E., Cheek, E.H. and Semingson, P. (Ed.) Best Practices in Teaching Digital Literacies (Literacy Research, Practice and Evaluation, Vol. 9), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xi. https://doi.org/10.1108/S2048-045820180000009017
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2018 Emerald Publishing Limited
Half Title Page
Best Practices in Teaching Digital Literacies
Series Page
Literacy Research, Practice and Evaluation
Series Editors: Evan Ortlieb and Earl H. Cheek, Jr.
Previous Volumes:
Volume 1: | Using Informative Assessments towards Effective Literacy Instruction |
Volume 2: | Advanced Literary Practices: From the Clinic to the Classroom |
Volume 3: | School-based Interventions for Struggling Readers, K-8 |
Volume 4: | Theoretical Models of Learning and Literacy Development |
Volume 5: | Video Reflection in Literacy Teacher Education and Development: Lessons from Research and Practice |
Volume 6: | Video Research in Disciplinary Literacies |
Volume 7: | Writing Instruction to Support Literacy Success |
Volume 8: | Addressing Diversity in Literacy Instruction |
Title Page
Literacy Research, Practice and Evaluation Volume 9
Best Practices in Teaching Digital Literacies
EDITED BY
Evan Ortlieb
St. John’s University, USA
Earl H. Cheek, Jr.
Louisiana State University, USA
Peggy Semingson
The University of Texas at Arlington, USA
United Kingdom – North America – Japan India – Malaysia – China
Copyright Page
Emerald Publishing Limited
Howard House, Wagon Lane, Bingley BD16 1WA, UK
First edition 2018
Copyright © 2018 Emerald Publishing Limited
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British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN: 978-1-78754-434-5 (Print)
ISBN: 978-1-78754-551-9 (Online)
ISBN: 978-1-78754-720-9 (Epub)
ISSN: 2048-0458 (Series)
Contents
About the Volume Editors | vii |
List of Contributors | ix |
Foreword | xi |
Disruptive Innovations for Teacher Education | |
Evan Ortlieb, Annalisa Susca, Jean Votypka, and Earl H. Cheek, Jr. | 1 |
Using the Technology Integration Planning Cycle to Prepare Pre-service Teachers for Multimodal Instruction | |
Beth Beschorner, Jamie Colwell, Amy Hutchison, and Lindsay Woodward | 13 |
Designing E-Books: Enhancing Prospective Teachers’ Digital Literacy Skills | |
Chinwe H. Ikpeze | 29 |
Only One iPad: Preparing Pre-service Teachers to Teach Digital Literacies in Under-resourced Elementary Schools | |
Chrystine Mitchell and Jennifer D. Turner | 43 |
Locating Meaning in a Digital Age | |
Heather K. Casey | 61 |
Using Backchanneling Technology to Facilitate Dialogic Discussions about Literature | |
James S. Chisholm | 75 |
Digital Literacies and Climate Change: Exploring Reliability and Truth(s) with Pre-service Teachers | |
James S. Damico, Alexandra Panos, and Michelle Myers | 93 |
Digital Internships: Enriching Teaching and Learning with Primary Resources | |
Jenny M. Martin | 109 |
Pre-service Teachers’ Use of Multimodal Text Sets and Technology in Teaching Reading: Lessons Learned from a Design-Based Study | |
Lisa M. O’Brien, Alejandra Salinas, Kelly C. Reinhart, and Jeanne R. Paratore | 123 |
Taking the Book Review on Air: Bringing Young Adult Literature to Life in Teacher Education | |
Molly Buckley-Marudas | 137 |
Use of Techscaffold to Foster Teachers’ Decision-making Processes to Support Technology Integration | |
Richard W. Beach, John Michael Scott, and Greg Klotz | 153 |
Language Today: Promoting Ela Content Area Learning through Collaboratively Engaged Social Media Practice | |
Carl A. Young, Nicolette Filson, and Rachael Debnam-O’Dea | 169 |
Tactile Picture Book Making and Multimodal Composition: Students Design for Equity in English Language Arts | |
Bridget Dalton and Kirsten Musetti | 195 |
The Beginning, Acting, Telling (Bat) Model: A Visual Framework for Teaching Digital Literacy through Inquiry and Information Seeking | |
Valerie Nesset and Mary McVee | 215 |
Empowering Students as Critical Readers and Writers in Online Spaces | |
W. Ian O’Byrne | 233 |
Index | 251 |
About the Volume Editors
Evan Ortlieb is a Professor and Coordinator of the Literacy Program in the Department of Education Specialties at St. John’s University in New York City. He has previous work experience in Singapore and Australia and expertise on literacy improvement, literacy teacher preparation, language diversity, and differentiated literacy instruction. He currently serves as the President of the Specialized Literacy Professionals SIG of the International Literacy Association, a Member of the Board of Directors of the International Innovative Community Group of the Literacy Research Association, and the Section Editor of the Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy. His outreach efforts are highlighted by serving as the President of the Ortlieb Foundation, a non-profit organization that provides college scholarships for cancer patients.
Earl H. Cheek, Jr. is a Patrick and Edwidge Olinde Endowed Professor Emeritus in the Department of Educational Theory, Policy, and Practice at Louisiana State University. As a lifelong literacy leader, he has published widely across fields of content area reading, reading teacher education, diagnostic-perspective methods, and dyslexia. He has graduated over 75 PhD candidates and has served on various prestigious editorial boards as well as committees within the International Literacy Association, the Literacy Research Association, and the Association of Literacy Educators and Researchers.
Peggy Semingson is an Associate Professor of Curriculum and Instruction at The University of Texas at Arlington, where she teaches online courses in Literacy Studies. Dr Semingson has experience as a classroom teacher and reading specialist in both Southern California and Texas. Her research interests include social contexts of literacy learning, digital pedagogies, and online literacy teacher education. She was awarded the Jeanne S. Chall Research Grant from Harvard University in 2009–2010 and was awarded the prestigious 2013 USDLA Best Practices Platinum Award for Excellence in Distance Learning Teaching. In 2010, she was awarded the President’s Award for Excellence in Distance Education Teaching at UT Arlington. Most recently she won the 2017 International Literacy Association (ILA) Jerry Johns Outstanding Teacher Educator in Reading Award.
List of Contributors
Richard W. Beach | University of Minnesota USA |
Beth Beschorner | Minnesota State University USA |
Molly Buckley-Marudas | Cleveland State University USA |
Heather K. Casey | Rider University USA |
Earl H. Cheek, Jr. | Louisiana State University USA |
James S. Chisholm | University of Louisville USA |
Jamie Colwell | Old Dominion University USA |
Bridget Dalton | University of Colorado Boulder USA |
James S. Damico | Indiana University USA |
Rachael Debnam-O’Dea | North Carolina State University USA |
Nicolette Filson | North Carolina State University USA |
Amy Hutchison | George Mason University USA |
Chinwe H. Ikpeze | St. John Fisher College USA |
Greg Klotz | University of Minnesota USA |
Jenny M. Martin | Bridgewater College USA |
Mary McVee | State University of New York at Buffalo USA |
Chrystine Mitchell | Pennsylvania State University USA |
Kirsten Musetti | University of Colorado Boulder USA |
Michelle Myers | Indiana University USA |
Valerie Nesset | State University of New York at Buffalo USA |
Lisa M. O’Brien | Boston University USA |
W. Ian O’Byrne | College of Charleston USA |
Evan Ortlieb | St. John’s University USA |
Alexandra Panos | University of Nebraska Omaha USA |
Jeanne R. Paratore | Boston University USA |
Kelly C. Reinhart | Lexington Public Schools USA |
Alejandra Salinas | Boston University USA |
John Michael Scott | University of California, Berkeley USA |
Annalisa Susca | St. John’s University USA |
Jennifer D. Turner | University of Maryland College Park USA |
Jean Votypka | St. John’s University USA |
Lindsay Woodward | Drake University USA |
Carl A. Young | North Carolina State University USA |
Foreword
Living in a digital era with constant dynamic flux means that we must stay up to date with the ever-changing approaches to teaching literacy both in PK-12 settings and teacher preparation. Texts, curriculum, and literacy practices both in and out of educational spaces in PK-12 and teacher education are moving toward paperless, interactive, multimodal, and generally high-tech mediums. No longer is technology an add-on to instruction; it is essential to communication and creates new platforms and possibilities for learning. Indeed, classroom instruction and teacher preparation must embrace the digital turn to stay current and relevant. It is essential that we seek to understand and implement meaningful digital-based literacy instruction in the classroom and understand both the benefits and constraints of such practice within teacher education programs.
This volume showcases cutting-edge research that focuses on aligning PK-12 instruction and teacher education with digital pedagogies and literacy learning. The research setting varies from elementary and secondary classrooms (field-based research), pre-service teacher preparation (university-based settings), and cyberspace (e.g., social media). Across the chapters, the authors seek to connect theory to practice toward innovative teaching with emerging technology tools, digitally connected curricula, and reimagined teacher preparation processes. This volume is mindful of the possibilities of technology-based literacy learning while offering caveats and cautions when implanting this type of practice.
Peggy Semingson
- Prelims
- Disruptive Innovations for Teacher Education
- Using the Technology Integration Planning Cycle to Prepare Pre-service Teachers for Multimodal Instruction
- Designing E-Books: Enhancing Prospective Teachers’ Digital Literacy Skills
- Only One iPad: Preparing Pre-service Teachers to Teach Digital Literacies in Under-resourced Elementary Schools
- Locating Meaning in a Digital Age
- Using Backchanneling Technology to Facilitate Dialogic Discussions about Literature
- Digital Literacies and Climate Change: Exploring Reliability and Truth(s) with Pre-service Teachers
- Digital Internships: Enriching Teaching and Learning with Primary Resources
- Pre-service Teachers’ Use of Multimodal Text Sets and Technology in Teaching Reading: Lessons Learned from a Design-Based Study
- Taking the Book Review on Air: Bringing Young Adult Literature to Life in Teacher Education
- Use of Techscaffold to Foster Teachers’ Decision-making Processes to Support Technology Integration
- Language Today: Promoting Ela Content Area Learning through Collaboratively Engaged Social Media Practice
- Tactile Picture Book Making and Multimodal Composition: Students Design for Equity in English Language Arts
- The Beginning, Acting, Telling (Bat) Model: A Visual Framework for Teaching Digital Literacy through Inquiry and Information Seeking
- Empowering Students as Critical Readers and Writers in Online Spaces
- Index