{"id":710,"date":"2003-09-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"2003-09-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost:8888\/cite\/2016\/02\/09\/using-technology-tools-to-support-learning-in-the-english-language-arts\/"},"modified":"2016-06-01T19:56:57","modified_gmt":"2016-06-01T19:56:57","slug":"using-technology-tools-to-support-learning-in-the-english-language-arts","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/citejournal.org\/volume-3\/issue-4-03\/general\/using-technology-tools-to-support-learning-in-the-english-language-arts","title":{"rendered":"Using Technology Tools to Support Learning in the English Language Arts"},"content":{"rendered":"

Hypermedia authoring, as taught by Dr. Myers, involves the process of juxtaposing, through video sequences or website hyperlinks, various multimedia “texts”\u2014print, music, video, image, gesture, art, and more\u2014 to focus on a life relevant issue or experience represented by these texts. Through the process of creating a hypermedia project, the authors engage in the analysis and critique of the possible identities, relationships, and values signified by the texts and their multiple possible readings. This constructive process generates the critical literacy activity with texts that is a central content goal of the English language arts curriculum.<\/p>\n

The critical literacy goal is layered with the more practical observation that both methods students and secondary school students become quite intrigued and enthused with the ability to create hypermedia projects. The English classroom takes on an air of language play and relevance as students find many ways to connect and manipulate their rich multimedia lives outside of school within the classroom, and slowly begin to discover how ideas within classroom readings permeate all the texts of the world.<\/p>\n

Dr. Myers has been integrating hypermedia authoring for critical literacy since 1995 through English methods classroom projects that use commercially available software such as StorySpace, Adobe Premiere, Photoshop, SoundEdit 16, iMovie, and various web authoring products such as Dreamweaver. Most of the projects have originated in the reading of literature either as an entire class or in small groups. Because the study of literature is central to the secondary school English classroom, the transfer of critical hypermedia authoring to the secondary school classroom has been very successful for many students and their cooperating mentor teachers in field experience work Dr. Myers has supervised. Some projects have originated in the analysis of media texts and their powerful role in the construction of cultural identities and values.<\/p>\n

Recently, Dr. Myers has framed the creation of electronic portfolios for English education students. They are now a multiyear, constructive process resulting in a hypermedia website in which preservice teachers explore their developing positions on educational issues and curricular ideas for English instruction. In 2000, Dr. Myers began applying hypermedia authoring in an international context. He now integrates into his English methods classes the critical analysis of textual meaning from multiple international perspectives and supports authentic second language learning through hypermedia authoring.<\/p>\n

That work has most recently resulted in a 2003-05 U.S. Department of Education Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE) grant for A Pedagogy for Intercultural Critical Literacy Education. This project will integrate collaborative hypermedia authoring projects between students in methods classes in three US and three European universities. Examples of these projects are introduced in the following section with appropriate links to existing websites.<\/p>\n

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Examining Themes That Connect Literary Texts to Popular Culture Media Texts and Everyday Life<\/p>\n

Methods class projects that inspire and motivate students require small groups of students to identify significant themes in a work of literature, then explore diverse perspectives on those themes through multimedia texts. The following websites created by small groups of English methods students connect novels in a thematic approach to raise questions about cultural ideals and beliefs.<\/p>\n

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Notions of Family (http:\/\/www.ed.psu.edu\/k-12\/culture\/family\/ideas.html<\/a>)<\/p>\n

Disillusionment (http:\/\/www.ed.psu.edu\/k-12\/culture\/disillusionment\/<\/a>)<\/p>\n

Survival (http:\/\/www.ed.psu.edu\/k-12\/culture\/survival\/frstpge.html<\/a>)<\/p>\n

America and Dreams in Literature (http:\/\/www.ed.psu.edu\/k-12\/culture\/themes\/americadreams.html<\/a>)<\/p>\n

Victims of Oppression (http:\/\/www.ed.psu.edu\/k-12\/culture\/oppression\/default.html<\/a>)<\/p>\n

\"Figure<\/p>\n

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The Analysis of One Work of Literature by an Entire Class<\/p>\n

Traditional literature instruction focuses interpretive activity on a single text, and the teacher becomes the single arbitrator of correct meaning. While authors certainly have intentions, meaning is a constructive event that draws from the social lives of the readers. These whole class hypermedia websites involve students organizing and juxtaposing texts from their experiences to connect to the central piece of literature. This activity builds the intertextual context, or cultural schemas, required to debate potential meanings within the focal text of study. New computer digital technologies provide the teacher and student with tools for experiencing these connections in ways not previously available. These projects, in particular, generate relevance for traditional school readings in everyday life experience.<\/p>\n

The Shipping News<\/i> (http:\/\/www.ed.psu.edu\/k-12\/shippingnews\/default.html<\/a>)<\/p>\n

Romeo and Juliet<\/i> (http:\/\/www.ed.psu.edu\/k-12\/culture\/rj\/default.htm<\/a>)<\/p>\n

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Asynchronous Communication About Literary Texts<\/p>\n

Discussion of responses to the characters and events in literature has often been embedded in the process of creating hypermedia projects. In the In Country<\/i> cross-cultural website project (http:\/\/www.ed.psu.edu\/k-12\/incountry<\/a>), methods students in the US, Sweden, and South Korea participated in various message boards on the following topics:<\/p>\n

Role of family relationships in growing up<\/i>. How do cultures differ in their family relationships, especially those that surround the teenager graduating from school?<\/p>\n