While standard two describes the importance of designing and
developing digital age learning experiences and assessments, I feel there is an
immense importance to the “old literacy”, even in contrast to the argument for “new
literacy” in a day and age of blogs and tweets (Richtel, 2012). Contrary to
those, such as Duke Professor Cathy N. Davidson whom suggests the eradication
of the term paper in lieu of creative blog writing, a form of the “new literacy”,
I strongly advocate for the “old literacy”. Those including Fitzhugh, with the “page
a year” solution (one page paper and source per grade level), and Douglas B.
Neeves with bold sentiment states, “Writing a term paper is a dying art, but
those who do write them have a dramatic leg up in terms of critical thinking,
argumentation and the sort of expression required not only in college, but in
the job market” support the ideals of the “old literacy”. While technology can
certainly aid in learning experiences and differentiation, it should certainly
be no substitute for learning how to clearly articulate a written point using
standard essay structure, formatting, citation, grammar, conventions, etc., all
of which are incredibly important, as Neeves suggests, for upper-level education
and beyond. Even if students don’t plan for upper-level education, they still
need to know how to write – not blog and tweet –write. There are certain
baseline skills that come with essay-writing that are so much more than what
they seem. Citing text evidence in an essay as a seventh grader for example,
could perhaps help that student, later, as a senior, not spout of unvalidated
claims regarding a controversial topic over social media because they know they
need to support an argument with evidence and not just spout like an
uninhibited geyser. I digress – a little.
A recent unit in my social studies class emphasizes the
clear need for continual development of “old literacy” skills, despite
arguments for a focus on those pertaining to “new literacy”. After a week of
studying Japanese geography and culture, working through three textbook
chapters and a mapping activity, students then spent a week rotating through
nine stations (three per day for three days) exploring primary and secondary
reference material, working through guiding questions, engaging in group
discussion, and creating a small art piece related to samurai armor. The third
week of the unit included instruction on comparative/contrast writing, with
emphasis on transitions to show comparison, as well as re-teaching of strong
thesis and plan sentences, incorporation of text evidence, and proper citation
(which were concurrently emphasized in ELA with another writing task, as well
as previous writing tasks throughout the year). Students were provided three
sets of comparative literature on samurai and knights to analyze and
incorporate in their essays, and were also encouraged to utilize any of the
sources from the previous station work, to compare and contrast the samurai of
Japan and knight of Europe. While the essay assignment, and unit in general,
were not technologically rich, aside from the link to the variety of sources
explored, I feel this is less important that the focus on “old literacy” skills
that still hold utmost importance even in the digital age.
The work samples provided below for comparison depict that
of a special education student (left) and a regular education student (right).
The special education student received some additional, individualized
instruction, as he is not part of regular ELA and therefore has not had
essay-writing instruction, and differentiated expectations (single body
paragraph instead of two to three), including the expectation that only one source needed to be cited. He still incorporated quoted and cited text
evidence (scoring 80%), while the regular education student who turned in a two-body paragraph
essay (scoring 60%) void of any text evidence, has received regular ELA instruction all
year, and has turned in previous essays in which he quoted/cited text, meeting
standards. What gives!?!
Thus, I posit the question: should students like this continue
to be exposed to essay writing until they master it, so then they may blog and
tweet coherently and responsibly later in the future, or should they just skip
to the creative blogging and tweeting straight off without learning any foundational
structure? I would hope the answer is obvious, that students need these
foundational skills, however “old literacy” they may be.
Reference List:
Clark, Melissa (2017). Using Technology Tools for Assessment in the Ensemble Setting. National Association for Music Education.
Richtel, Matt (2012). Blogs vs. Term Papers. The New York Times.