There’s more to digital literacy and understanding MS office.
I’ve been doing some serious investigation into how we are preparing children to live in the 21st century. There’s been a shift in focus in public schools from traditional literacy to “digital literacy”. This is definitely to be commended. But, unfortunately, when I did some research into curriculum and lesson plans that are available on the Internet, they all seem to focus on teaching kids how to use Microsoft Word to write a resume, Excel to do a spreadsheet, PowerPoint to do a presentation, and maybe how to build a web page or send an e-mail, and, frankly, little else.
Though, learning how to use MS office is not necessarily a bad thing, I personally don’t believe that something schools should focus on. For a number of reasons, I think the time the kids are in classes studying digital literacy should be spent on other subjects. These include how to find information on the Internet and then verify its validity, How to handle the vast array of information that they will be facing them sift through it in order to find what is important, of course, how to be safe online, and, in some ways most importantly, how to use the 21st-century skills they already have and adapt them for use in the education system and in dealing with those who are not as proficient.
My hope is that in the course of this blog, I’ll focus on some of the areas that I think we need to emphasize more in our effort to help develop digital literacy in children.
Something that is common to everything I write is the emphasis I place on modern kids, digital natives as some call them, and how they have a natural understanding of the technologies in our world. When it comes to the tools that are at the heart of digital literacy, kids do just fine. In fact, I personally believe we be better using them as mentors to the 20th century teachers who are actually teaching them.
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