Páez
(2008) points out that digital literacy is no longer conceived as the acquisition
of skills and abilities to use a Web browser, for example. It now connotes more
complex professional competences such as critically assessing the information
provided in the sources and means of communication, being selective about those
sources, evaluating its content and assessing its usefulness.
Taking into consideration the UNESCO ICT Teacher
Competency Framework Modules, I believe that not all teachers and students in
Venezuela have the digital competencies to live and work in the 21st
century. First, I doubt that all teachers in Venezuela are aware of policies
related to the implementation of ICT in Education. Second, there is
uncertainty that all teachers are able to integrate the use of technology into
the curriculum. This is particularly the case in primary and secondary
education. Third, there is no clear evidence that all teachers in Venezuela
know where, with whom, when, when not and how to use ICT for classroom
activities and presentations.
Prato and Mendoza (2006) indicate that many
teachers in Venezuela who have access to ICT are not sufficiently prepared to
make effective use of them. Which is a problem, not only from the pedagogical
point of view but also economic as bringing all this technology to schools and
communities translates into an expensive investment which must be efficiently.
Therefore, it is imperative to train teachers and students in the use of ICT
effectively.
I consider that the lack of infrastructure to
implement ICT effectively is the main issue in our local context. Also, there
is no training provided to teachers and students to efficiently use ICT.
Finally, I think there is lack of confidence among some teachers and students
in the use of ICT. I guess they fall in the technophobe category.
Considering that digital media sources are used
daily as part of life and work, we understand that the amount, choice, range
and complexity of information can be vast. This then can lead to poor selection
of sources and time wasted on re-tracing materials. Navigation skills and
information management can guarantee that up to date, significant sources are
located in an accessible format and sources are well organised and documented
to enable effective retrieval, as and when required. The influence and
omnipresence of digital media mean that synthesis and critical assessment of a
diverse selection of resources are also important skills. Also, ethical and
legal use of information and maintaining the security and privacy of the user’s
and others’ information are vital.
Bawdon (2008) developed a valuable
conceptualisation of digital literacy which includes four elements:
underpinnings, background knowledge, central competencies, and attitudes and
perspectives:
Underpinnings: Foundational literacy;
Basic ICT skills
Background knowledge: The nature of
information – forms, sources/origins, understanding of the ‘publication
chains’, authorship, provenance
Central competencies: Finding/searching;
Navigating; Synthesising; Critically analysing; Creating; and Communicating
Perspectives: Independent learning;
Ethical use of information (respect for privacy); and Ethical behaviour in
digital communication.
Digital literacy as an important part of
transliteracy. It is the literacy of convergence, unifying literacies
past and present across different platforms, media and cultures. This implies
we all have a contribution to make in being able to support our own and each
other’s digital literacy development but also acceptance of where we have all
come from and who we want to be both now and in the future. What is
comforting about transliteracy is that it includes and values other measures of
what it means to navigate the 21st century life. It isn’t tied to a
particular concept or piece of technology and it has space for the relationship
we have with technology that at times feels just like an inevitable dystopian
future of job losses.
It is also worth noting that digital literacy is
not a stationary concept: as ICT changes, what it means to be digitally
literate also needs to evolve to ensure that students develop and apply skills
in appropriate new technologies for information discovery, transfer, analysis,
review and communication.
Besides, most students today have more knowledge
about technology than their teachers, but most have not had instruction on how
and when to use technology appropriately.
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