Procedural literacy: Difference between revisions

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=Introduction=
=Introduction=
Beyond the questions about a <nowiki>"new millenium learner"</nowiki>, digital natives, a digital divide and educational technology in the web 2.0 era is a search about changes in our educational culture and its social implications. What should be part of a basic, common knowledge base and culture in the 21st sentury? (BIA
What has prompted the writing of this article is the question wether <nowiki>"digital natives"</nowiki> as Prensky has called the generation born after the development of digital enironments not only are better users of information technologies but also if they understand the underlying technology better than any "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.
What has prompted the writing of this article is the question wether <nowiki>"digital natives"</nowiki> as Prensky has called the generation born after the development of digital enironments not only are better users of information technologies but also if they understand the underlying technology better than any "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.


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=Webography=
=Webography=
[[http://www.bie.org/about/21st_century_skills Buck Institute for Education: 21st century skills]]

Revision as of 08:48, 14 November 2010

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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

Beyond the questions about a "new millenium learner", digital natives, a digital divide and educational technology in the web 2.0 era is a search about changes in our educational culture and its social implications. What should be part of a basic, common knowledge base and culture in the 21st sentury? (BIA

What has prompted the writing of this article is the question wether "digital natives" as Prensky has called the generation born after the development of digital enironments not only are better users of information technologies but also if they understand the underlying technology better than any "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 and one of the latest expression of a long series of definitions of literacy that include information-, computer-, media- or digital literacy (Badwen 2001).

Several other authors (Sheil 1983 and 1993, Proulx 2002) join the idea that procedural literacy should be part of the basic culture of any digital device and/or web 2.0 user if he is to be truly literate in the present time. The call for procedural literacy seems to confirm that the education of digital natives, but also of any user of information technologies, is not complete without an “understanding of the interplay between the culturally embedded practices of human meaning-making and technically mediated processes”(Mateas 2005).

Thus the subject shifts from a focus on the technological knowledge of "digital natives" to the literacy and procedural literacy of the "new millenium learner"and to considerations about the issue of literacy in the age of the web 2.0.


History

Although the expression "procedural literacy" is recent, calls for a true literacy of computation have been made already in the sixties, at the very beginning of computer development (Mateas). Papert's work on the programming game logo (Papert 1980) is only one of many educational programs and research projects that still develop today and that are intended to transmit a general understanding of the programming language. This language should be treated as “a universal representational medium for describing structure and process” (Mateas 2005). This call is echoed for example in France where in the eighties there is a discussion around "numeric alphabetization" (Proulx 2002). Finding a realistic model with defined educational objectives is the central question for teaching computer literacy. These issues are discussed from the eighties on and are the subject of an agenda of cognitive science research (Sheil 1983 and 1993). The development of internet gives these consideration a new dimension and again has driven discussions on how to teach general computer or procedural literacy.

Definitions

Literacy

Literacy is the condition of being able to read and write, being learned, having a commpetence in or with something (Bawden 2001). Thus, literacy means being able to receive, understand, and transmit information and it is closely linked to eductation as well as to the skills and competencies for a successfull social life in a particular culture. Defining literacy as opposed to illiteracy often carries the concept that illiteracy can be "cured" and that literacy can be measured accurately. But the concept of literacy has a close relation with a particular culture and is a relative concept.(Bawden 2001). Literacy was born with the first sumeric alphabet, it has followed the development of languages, of hieroglyphs, of books, and it has spread together with printed media to a greater part of our society. Today literacy has many names: Media literacy, digital-, network-, IT- or computer literacy. There seem to be a consensus among most researchers that information literacy is a more general expression that encompasses different competencies linked to searching, finding, evaluating and transmit information. using digital devices is part of these competencies as well as understanding how the information is processed. critical thinking

Literacy and its implications: social, cultural, educational, for a successful career.


Procedural literacy

Definitions: Procedural literacy:Procedural literacy is going beyond "black box programs" and programming languages themselves to develop an understanding that “the space of computation is bigger than the particular view of it embodied (enforced) by any particular programming model”(Mateas 2005). Being literate in computation or acquiring procedural literacy means an awareness of the constraints of specific tools (or programming languages) and being capable of considering a larger space of computational possibilities.


Web 2.0 and procedural literacy

Selwyn: use of computers by digital natives is varied and often unspectaculer. Not necessarely better technological knowledge/user knowledge.[digital divide] Proulx: link with open source communities could open the minds for prooceedural literacy.


Educational issues

Issues: What to teach for procedural literacy, how to teach it? Should the computer be used as a cognitive tool to acquire procedural literacy?(proulx)

Examples

games as the vehicle for transmitting computer literacy as well as span the culture divide humanistic - artistic and scientific-technical and for learning procedural literacy (mateas 2005)

Bibliography

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

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

Papert, S.: Children, Computers and Powerful Ideas, Mindstorm, New York: Basic Books, 1980.

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

Proulx, S.: Trajectoires d'usages des technologies de communication: les formes d'appropriation d'une culture numérique comme enjeu d'une socuété du savoir, ANN. Télécommun., 57, No3-4, 2002.

Sheil, B.A. : Teaching procedural literacy, Presentaion abstract, Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, 1983.

Sheil, B.A. : Coping with complexity, information technology and people, Vol.1, Iss.4, pp295-320, 1993.

Webography

[Buck Institute for Education: 21st century skills]