The first edition of this popular book explored new literacies, new kinds of knowledge and classroom practices in the context of the massive growth of electronic information and communication technologies. This timely new edition discusses a fresh range of practices like blogging, fanfiction, mobile/wireless communications, and fan practices that remix audio and visual texts. Revised and updated throughout, the book examines: Popular practices and social networks associated with contemporary phenomena like Flickr and Wikipedia. Blogging, podscasting and mobile/wireless communication practices. Writing practices within online fanfiction and manga-anime communities. The production of Anime-Music-Video artifacts and online multimodal...
As new techno-literacy practices become embedded in society, they impact on ever younger age groups....
The ever-changing development of digital technology has become a scapegoat that exacerbates literacy...
In the mid-1990s, we asked a question that has likely been asked in one way or another by educators ...
The first edition of this popular book explored new literacies, new kinds of knowledge and classroom...
The new edition of this popular book takes a fresh look at what it means to think of literacies as s...
In the second edition of their influential book on ‘New Literacies’, Lankshear & Knobel (2006) argue...
The new edition of this popular book takes a fresh look at what it means to think of literacies as s...
The first edition of this work was reviewing the new literacies, new types of knowledge and classroo...
Literacy education continues to be dominated by a mindset that has passed its use-by date. Education...
A New Literacies Reader is an introduction to social and cultural studies of new literacies from the...
The authors contend that new technologies have developed new literacies and new ways of thinking tha...
In this chapter the authors discuss two central themes: the changing nature of literate activity bro...
The increasing ubiquity and use of digital technologies across social and cultural life is a key cha...
New media has enabled users to informally learn, consume, create and produce in many different ways ...
Young adult literacy is about complicated relationships between emotional- and social-driven young p...
As new techno-literacy practices become embedded in society, they impact on ever younger age groups....
The ever-changing development of digital technology has become a scapegoat that exacerbates literacy...
In the mid-1990s, we asked a question that has likely been asked in one way or another by educators ...
The first edition of this popular book explored new literacies, new kinds of knowledge and classroom...
The new edition of this popular book takes a fresh look at what it means to think of literacies as s...
In the second edition of their influential book on ‘New Literacies’, Lankshear & Knobel (2006) argue...
The new edition of this popular book takes a fresh look at what it means to think of literacies as s...
The first edition of this work was reviewing the new literacies, new types of knowledge and classroo...
Literacy education continues to be dominated by a mindset that has passed its use-by date. Education...
A New Literacies Reader is an introduction to social and cultural studies of new literacies from the...
The authors contend that new technologies have developed new literacies and new ways of thinking tha...
In this chapter the authors discuss two central themes: the changing nature of literate activity bro...
The increasing ubiquity and use of digital technologies across social and cultural life is a key cha...
New media has enabled users to informally learn, consume, create and produce in many different ways ...
Young adult literacy is about complicated relationships between emotional- and social-driven young p...
As new techno-literacy practices become embedded in society, they impact on ever younger age groups....
The ever-changing development of digital technology has become a scapegoat that exacerbates literacy...
In the mid-1990s, we asked a question that has likely been asked in one way or another by educators ...