Literacies and Learning in Motion

Author:

Frawley Jessica Katherine1,Dyson Laurel Evelyn2

Affiliation:

1. University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia

2. University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, Australia

Abstract

Mobile and participatory cultures have led to widespread change in the way we communicate; emphasizing user generated content and digital multimedia. In this environment, informal learning may occur through digital and networked activities, with literacy no longer limited to alphabetic and character-based texts. This article explores adult learners' new literacies within the context of a digital mobile storytelling project. A qualitative approach is used to explore the artifacts and practices of nine adult participants who comprise the study. Participants created a range of fiction, non-fiction, poetry and diary-style content in a variety of modes and media. Outcomes from content analysis, interview and survey methods depict mobile digital literacies as characteristically situated, experiential and multimodal. The mobile and participatory nature of this project was catalytic to participants' imaginative re-interpretation of the world around them as sources for meaning making and transformation. This paper contributes a case example of mobile learning with adults in a community setting.

Publisher

IGI Global

Subject

Education,General Computer Science

Reference68 articles.

1. Web 2.0 storytelling: Emergence of a new genre.;B.Alexander;EDUCAUSE Review,2008

2. Brady, F., & Dyson, L. E. (2010). A comparative study of mobile technology adoption in remote Australia. Paper presented at theSeventh International Conference on Cultural Attitudes towards Technology and Communication (CATaC), Vancouver, Canada (pp. 69-83).

3. Generating learning through the crowd: The role of social media practices in supporting students as producers at scale.;P.Bryant;ASCILITE2017: 34th International Conference on Innovation, Practice and Research in the Use of Educational Technologies in Tertiary Education,2017

4. Colley, H., Hodkinson, P., & Malcolm, J. (2002). Non-formal learning: Mapping the conceptual terrain. Retrieved from http://www.infed.org/archives/e-texts/colley_informal_learning.htm

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