Procedural literacy

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Revision as of 16:00, 10 November 2010 by Sugarch0 (talk | contribs)
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In principle, someone is working on it and there should be a better version in a not so distant future.
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This page will explain what procedural literacy or computer literacy is and what role it has or has not in today's (and tomorrow's) educational technologies. Author: sugarch0

Introduction

What has prompted the writing of this article is the question wether "digital natives" not only are better users of information technologies but also if they understand the underlying technology better than any interested "digital immigrant", as Prensky calls people that have not been born amidst a warm nest of interconnectedness but in an era where phones were still attached to the wall by wires.

First interesting views were found in the article "Procedural Litearcy: Educating the new Media Practitioner" by Michael Mateas. Further readings showed that the term "procedural literacy" is new (today in 2010) and one of the latest expression of a long series that includes information, computer, media or digital literacy (Badwen 2001).

History and context

Examples

Definitions and issues

Bibliography

D.Badwen: Information and Digital Literacies: a Review of Concepts. Journal of Documentation, vol. 57, No2, pp 218-259, March 2001

M. Mateas: Procedural Literacy: Educating the New Media Practitioner. On the Horizon, Vol. 13, No1, 2005

M. Prenxky: Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants, On the Horizon, MCB University Press, Vol. 9, No5, October 2001

Webography