Exploring critical digital literacy practices : everyday video in a dual language context / Jessica Zacher Pandya.
Call number: 371.33 P36J 2019 Material type: BookSeries: Expanding literacies in education seriesPublisher: New York : Routledge, 2019Description: xv, 128 p. : ill. ; 23 cmISBN: 9781138103580 :Subject(s): Video tapes in education | Digital video | Education, Bilingual | Children with disabilities -- Education -- Audio-visual aids | Children with social disabilities -- Education -- Audio-visual aidsDDC classification: 371.33 P36J 2019 Online resources: ดูปกและสารบัญ (see cover and contents)Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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General Books | สำนักวิทยบริการ (Center) ชั้น 7 หนังสือทั่วไปภาษาอังกฤษ 000-900 | Non-fiction | 371.33 P36J 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 3000029447 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Digital Video at School: Theoretical and Practical Considerations in Context -- Narrating Selves, Teaching Facts, and Taking Critical Stances: Digital Video Projects at Esperanza -- Child Composers at Work and Play -- Examining, and Working With, Children's Design Sensibilities -- Activism and Audience in School Video Projects -- On the Road Towards Redistributive, Transformative Social Justice.
In this book, Jessica Zacher Pandya examines the everyday videomaking practices of students in a dual language, under-resourced school in order to explore the ways children interrogate their worlds, the kinds of identities they craft, and the language and literacy learning practices that emerge from digital video production. Focusing on vulnerable populations who are often left out of innovative in- and out-of-school digital media projects-including English language learners, immigrants, and children with special needs-this book offers an expanded understanding of children's critical digital literacy practices, and shows how videomaking in the regular curriculum affords opportunities for redistributive social justice. Weaving together pedagogical, methodological, social, and political concerns into her examination of a real-world context, Pandya offers a practical and informative analysis of making videos in schools; examines the impact of videomaking on students' language use and agency; and adds significantly to current theorizations of digital and new literacies.
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