2. Digital Literacy
What is digital literacy?
“digital literacy expresses the sum of
capabilities an individual needs to live,
learn and work in a digital society”
3. How does digital literacy
impact on the student experience?
Digital Literacy
2008 Learners' experiences of e-learning programme
Students inhabit digitally-saturated personal/social worlds
Technology choices are critical to identity and experience
They expect 24/7 access to course information
BUT
Students struggle to transpose digital skills to study tasks
Academic staff skills/confidence critical to +ve experiences
Study preferences and needs are very different
2008/10 Student expectations studies
Prospective students unclear about the role technology could
play in learning at University
Students feel positive about using technology when educational
benefits are clear
ICT access and facilities becoming a factor in student choice
www.academy.gcal.ac.uk/llida
4. How can digital literacy
enhance the student experience?
Digital Literacy
Getting access to
learning opportunities
Integrating diverse
living/learning experiences
Being able to learn fluently across technologies and contexts
Knowing what I need to know,
and how to express it
Being a participant in the
digital learning community
Having critical judgement
in relation to digital means and media
www.academy.gcal.ac.uk/llida
Building academic/professional
digital identity
5. Is digital literacy
essential to the student experience?
Digital Literacy
And, if so, what are
our responsibilities?
www.academy.gcal.ac.uk/llida
6. What challenges do your students face
in becoming digitally literate learners?
7. How does digital literacy
develop through University study?
Digital Literacy
2009/10 Learning literacies in a digital age study
Learners need high-value, meaningful experiences in which
technology is intrinsic
Different subject areas demand different kinds of digital capability
Support is fragmented; staff often lack confidence in this area
www.academy.gcal.ac.uk/llida
8. How does digital literacy
develop through University study?
Digital Literacy
Identity
development
9. How does digital literacy
develop through University study?
Digital Literacy
How will we
manage multiple
identities in a
world where
public and
private are being
redefined?
How will we act
safely and
responsibility in
hybrid spaces?
10. Digital Literacy
How does this relate to
graduate attributes?
Sense making
Computational thinking
Social intelligence
New media literacy
Adaptive thinking
Cognitive load
management
Cross-cultural
competency
Virtual collaboration
Transdisciplinarity
Design mindset
Davies, A., Fidler, D., Gorbis, M. (2011) Future Work Skills 2020. Institute for the
Future, for the University of Phoenix Research Institute. University of Phoenix.
11. Digital Literacy
How does this relate to
graduate attributes?
Digital literacy one of five graduate attributes at
Oxford Brookes University, defined as…
The functional access, skills and practices
necessary to become . . .
a confident, agile adopter of a range of
technologies for personal, academic and
professional use
https://wiki.brookes.ac.uk/display/slidacases/Oxford+Brookes
12. What kinds of experience
do your students need to have...
(a) in the curriculum?
(b) in the co-curriculum?
… to develop authentic digital capabilities
and relevant graduate attributes?
13. How do institutions need to change?
2010 Supporting Learners in a
Digital Age (SLIDA)
9 institutions studied in depth
9 critical questions, including:
Q4. How can the development of digital
learners be supported in individual,
personalised ways?
Q5. In what ways can digital policies
and practices be student driven?
Q8. How are institutions making use of
effective digital learners to benefit other
learners?
wiki.brookes.ac.uk/display/slida
15. Involve learners in shaping their own
experience with technology
2009/12 Curriculum Design & Delivery
Students as active curriculum partners
Harnessing student skills
Creating collaborative cultures
'Engaged students – the leaders of
tomorrow – are encouraged to see how
their own ideas can lead to collaborative
change … If institutions can embrace
passionate student advocates, they will be
in a good position to drive forward
innovation and to make a real and
genuine difference to the services they
provide.'
Dale Potter, Students’ Project Coordinator,
University of Exeter
www.jisc.ac.uk/digiemerge
16. Integrate technologies
into learning places and spaces
University of Edinburgh SLIDA case study (2010)
New teaching studio: collaboration and personal devices 'designed in'
Informal group study spaces with wifi, sockets, projectors:
library pods, bookable rooms, common areas
Main library refurbishment: flexible spaces for different kinds of study
17. Integrate technologies
into learning places and spaces
We really, really struggled to be in the
computing lab, and there'd be ...six of
you trying to sit around one monitor...
We ended up doing it in separate
sections and putting it all together... It
really wasn't suited at all to group work.
Kate Slaughter, student
Brilliant. Absolutely brilliant.
I don't know how you did
without them, honestly,
because just every single
group would book those
rooms.
Marsali Wallace, student
18. Prepare learners for learning
with technology
Abingdon and Witney College
SLIDA case study
●
●
●
●
●
●
●
University of Bradford
Online pre-induction support
Extensive student consultation ●
Lack of digital and learning skills
●
Developed online package:
Digital and Learning Literacies
●
Induction (DALLI)
Reusable, updated regularly
All students undergo formative ●
assessment for IT skills
●
One hour digital literacy
induction sessions using DALLI ●
Revision/review any time
Expectations survey and first
year experience qu'aire
Students struggle with transition
to university study
Use familiar social software
environment
Pre-induction students ask
questions of student mentors
Meet other students pre-arrival
Links to 'Develop Me!' skills and
induction material
Student consultation: positively evaluated: continuously updated
https://wiki.brookes.ac.uk/pages/viewpage.action?pageId=36208955
19. Integrate Digital Literacies
#jiscdiglit
Developing Digital Literacies 2011/13
A sector-wide programme promoting the development of
coherent, inclusive and holistic institutional strategies and
organisational approaches for developing digital literacies for
staff and students in UK further and higher education
University of Greenwich
University of the Arts London
University of Exeter
Coleg Llandrillo
University of Plymouth
University of Reading
University of Bath
University College London
Oxford Brookes University Cardiff University
Worcester College
Institute of Education
www.jisc.ac.uk/whatwedo/programmes/elearning/
developingdigitalliteracies/
20. What could your institution be doing?
- to enhance the experience of
learning with technology?
- to offer digitally rich experiences in
and beyond the curriculum?
- to ensure all students have access
to digital devices, networks, skills?
- to recognise and respond to
students' digital preferences?
- to develop as a learning
organisation in the digital age?
22. Working across the sector
JISC is working in collaboration with sector bodies and
professional associations to:
Gather information and user requirements
Develop professional frameworks and practices
Synthesise and validate outcomes from the programme
Raise awareness and consult widely with stakeholders
Organisations we are working with initially include:
ALDinHE | ALT | AUA | HEDG | LSIS | NUS
ODHE | SCAP | SDF | SEDA | SCONUL | Vitae
Opportunities to involve and engage others will follow.