Exploring the Underbelly of Digital Literacies

By Professor Mark Brown

Digital Literacy is essential for successfully living, learning and working in today’s increasingly digitalised and rapidly changing world. This brief think piece is written on the assumption that most people would agree with this statement.

However, what we define or understand as digital literacy is far more problematic. As Lankshear and Knobel (2008) observe in their seminal book on the topic, ‘the most immediately obvious facts about accounts of digital literacy are that there are many of them and that there are significantly different kinds of concepts on offer’ (p.2). Therefore, in many respects it helps to talk of digital literacies rather than limit our thinking to a singular all-inclusive definition of the concept. In a similar vein, in both the academic and popular literature the language of digital literacies is often interchanged and/or intentionally expanded through terms like digital skills, digital fluency, digital capabilities, digital competencies, and so on. The different use of terminology and nomenclature makes the search for a commonly agreed definition or understanding of digital literacies even more elusive.

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Key takeaways

Set against this messy backdrop of competing definitions, models and frameworks, this blog post prior to OEB MidSummit explores the often unspoken underbelly of digital literacies. There are three core messages woven throughout this critical discussion about what it means to be digitally literate in the 21st Century. Firstly, the definition of literacy in whatever form is inherently political. Secondly, the digital literacies movement is complex and many efforts to propose definitions and develop related models and frameworks are decontextualised from social and situated​ practice. Lastly, most models and frameworks for digital skills, literacies or competencies fail to adequately address some of the powerful macro-level drivers and entangled and contradictory discourses behind the goal of preparing more digitally skilled learners, workers and citizens.

You can read more about the underbelly of digital literacies by reading the full OEB Insights blog post where this think piece was originally published.

Next Generation: Successful Digital Learning Research Symposium

We are pleased to report that the Digital Learning Research Symposium we hosted at the start of November, which attracted around 200 participants, was very successful.
next-gen-partners
After the Symposium we invited delegates to provide feedback on the event by completing an online evaluation. Thank you to those who responded to the survey (67 participants) and 100% of survey respondents rated the Symposium as ‘good’ or ‘excellent’. Similarly, 95% of respondents rated the value of the Symposium as ‘good’ or ‘excellent’, with 98% of people rating very highly the overall professionalism of the event. The administrative organisation was also rated highly and 94% of respondents indicated that they would attend a similar symposium if it was offered again in the future. A more detailed summary of the evaluation report can be downloaded from the link below.
• Evaluation report [pdf]
A copy of the Research Symposium Proceedings with titles, abstracts and suggested further readings is available from the following link:
The suite of videos provide a record and taste of the opening session and major keynote presentations over the course of the Research Symposium.