Loading...

Critical Digital Literacies as Social Praxis

Intersections and Challenges

by JuliAnna Ávila (Volume editor) Jessica Zacher Pandya (Volume editor)
©2013 Textbook VI, 228 Pages

Summary

This book won the Literacy Research Association’s 2014 Edward B. Fry Book Award
The contributors to this edited volume examine the simultaneous implementation of critical and digital literacies and explore ramifications for the development and assessment of critical digital literacies (CDL) curricula across educational contexts. We ask: How has the increasing ubiquity of digital literacies in and out of school affected our definitions of critical literacies? And how have our ever-changing perceptions of critical literacies affected how we define, teach, and engage in digital literacies? We believe that there is crucial work to be done at these intersections, work that builds upon the extensive bodies of critical and digital literacies research. Some issues and questions that chapters address are:
What is negotiated, gained, or lost in the process of combining the critical and the digital?
Where is the power located – and who is silenced, and how – in CDL approaches?
Can CDL practices disrupt classroom routines in constructive and engaging ways?
How has the divide between audience and participant, and the notion of collective intelligence, been challenged and redefined by CDL?
How do CDL practices impact youths’ identity constructions?
The essays in this volume present a balance between current issues and promising future opportunities and directions.

Details

Pages
VI, 228
Year
2013
ISBN (Hardcover)
9781433116940
ISBN (Softcover)
9781433116933
Language
English
Keywords
Literacy practice School curricula Youth identity Digital epistemology CDL development ubiquity collective intelligence
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2013. VI, 228 pp., num. ill.

Biographical notes

JuliAnna Ávila (Volume editor) Jessica Zacher Pandya (Volume editor)

JuliAnna Ávila is Assistant Professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, where she teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in English education. She received her PhD from the University of California at Berkeley and has published in Theory Into Practice, Pedagogies, Language Arts, and Teachers College Record. Jessica Zacher Pandya is Associate Professor at California State University, Long Beach in teacher education and liberal studies, where she researches and teaches about urban children’s literacy practices. In addition to many journal articles, she is the author of Overtested: How High-Stakes Accountability Fails English Language Learners.

Previous

Title: Critical Digital Literacies as Social Praxis