
Captain Ukraine: A new Superhero who stands for freedom and justice against oppression ????#StandWithUkraine #captainukraine #stopputin #Zelensky #Zelenskyy pic.twitter.com/66lTzdZMEi
— The First Casualty – Falklands War History (@FirstFalklands) March 2, 2022
English education for our age
This “writing” contributes to narratives and debates about heroism, military morale, fan fiction and US cultural imperialism. This kind of immediate, vibrant and global communication needs to be the basis of study in English. The ability to critically consume and strategically create social media is vital to the health of democracies. Yet writing for social media posts and powerful platforms such as Twitter, TikTok and Facebook is not central to how we teach English. Students need to be able to create memes, write rolling news blogs and produce digital news podcasts, all for networked audiences. They need to determine aims, invent concepts, manipulate images, combine different media, compose compelling text and respect copyright law. This is impactful and purposeful writing to achieve influence in the world. Research initiatives such as the Digital Self Portrait project demonstrate how students can create vivid new forms of “writing” that explore tensions between their own digitally rich lives and traditional literacies. Digital writing is often collaborative, and a recent Australian Education Research Organisation review recommends more collaborative writing in classrooms. Community organisations such as Write4Change are making this possible by connecting youth to write together using digital media via private, communal and moderated sites on mainstream platforms.Really enjoyed @mhall78‘s discussion of #Write4Change & “how writing is an ethical response.” #4TDW pic.twitter.com/NswYsT4uVx
— Cassie J. Brownell (@brownellcassie) October 10, 2016
Our approach is outdated
Yet education’s high-stakes assessment regimes don’t value these forms of writing. Sadly, the National Assessment Program – Literacy and Numeracy (NAPLAN) has narrowed the kinds of writing taught in schools even further. One sample NAPLAN writing task says, basically, “Here is a picture of a box. Write a story about it.” This approach needs to change so students are practising the forms of writing and communication that are meaningful in today’s world. This will support citizens of the future to participate fully in workplaces and, most importantly, in democracies. The Australian government, through the Australian Research Council, has recognised this and funded a new study into the importance of contemporary writing in education. This is through a Discovery Early Career Research Award (DECRA) titled Teaching digital writing in secondary English. This project will explore how teachers can conceptualise and enact the teaching of real-world writing.Launching #DECRA project blog on Teaching #digitalwriting today! How are #teachers conceptualising and teaching digital writing? Can English be more relevant? https://t.co/EH6dsPTXPE #subjectenglishissues #engchat #teamenglish #teamenglishoz #ozengchat @VATE_English @arc_gov_au pic.twitter.com/OMuAXiNz3X
— Lucinda McKnight (@LucindaMcKnigh8) March 16, 2022