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[ecrea] New Book: Digital Media, Culture and Education
Wed May 03 11:47:31 GMT 2017
Out now…
Digital Media, Culture and Education: Theorising Third-Space Literacies
By John Potter and Julian McDougall
http://www.springer.com/gb/book/9781137553140
“This book is for all those who realize we face new and complex problems
in education today; that staying in our academic silos and engaging in
business as usual will no longer do; and that digital technology can
free teachers to be designers, curators, and aggregators, bringing
astonishing resources to learners of all ages and in all places. It is a
magnificent piece of work and a breath of fresh air.” (James Paul Gee,
Mary Lou Fulton Presidential Professor of Literacy Studies, Regents’
Professor, Arizona State University, USA)
“Brings to life the lived experience and creativity of young people and
makes visible their meaning making practices. It surfaces ideas in ways
that are theoretically and methodologically ground-breaking … a
refreshing, hopeful, and above all, challenging book, that enables,
develops and supports new thinking in media education and literacy
studies. Accessibly written, this is a welcome addition to the field,
which speaks to the cultural context of civic engagement for young
people in and out of school, or ‘not-school’. Now, more than ever these
voices are needed as resistance is a key part of survival for young
people whose modes of participation need to be strengthened and
supported in a challenging world. Dynamic literacies are the way forward
– and this book articulates and maps out a pathway through to action.”
(Kate Pahl, Professor of Literacies in Education, University of
Sheffield, UK)
“This book makes a valuable contribution to the fields it inhabits, not
least by refusing reductive and easy polarities such as culture and
technology, school and not-school, digital literacy and media literacy.
Instead, Potter and McDougall set up a dialogue between fields of
research, concepts of literacy, and domains of practice, a cooperative
rather than adversarial model. They elaborate their central ideas of
third-space learning, dynamic literacies, porous expertise and digital
curation with a rich array of researched examples, showing the
importance of collaborative learning in practice. This will be an
essential read for lecturers, students and practitioners hoping to
understand the landscape of literacy and learning in the 21st century.”
(Andrew Burn, Professor of English, Media and Drama, University College
London, UK)
“Potter and McDougall provide a beautifully balanced overview of the
field with clear ways forward for reconceptualizing literacies and
developing new pedagogies. The book synthesizes key works in the field
and includes a range of case studies that illuminate important and novel
concepts. I fully expect the notion of third space literacies to be a
constant point of reference in years to come.” (Rebekah Willett,
Assistant Professor at the University of Madison-Wisconsin, USA)
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