Thursday 30 April 2020

Teaching digital literacy. part 1

                                             Navigation support documents 
There are many ways to teach digital literacy in the ESL classroom. One is using navigation support documents.   
Effective pedagogies for promoting digital literacy (now on called DL, I'm tired typing) start with using websites in the classroom. That’s it! It’s as simple as that. 
Bring websites into your teaching practices. Whether your students are young or old, experts or novices with the internet, start teaching DL by bringing in websites. Why? Because they're the most ubiquitous, accessible, available and easiest of all stuff digital,  and working with them efficiently is the most basic yet essential aspect of Digital Literacy.  


Bringing websites into your teaching is the first step to digital literacy Image credits

You’d have noticed that every time a discussion comes to using technology in the classroom, the first things the naysayers point out are electricity and the internet
Using websites in the classroom helps us win this argument; websites can help us beat the vagaries of electricity and the internet. Websites can be saved; several websites can be opened at a time and kept ready for later use; websites can be used for offline work; they can be downloaded or copied into a document; they're accessible for students with disabilities... the reasons are many.

The following are some things we can do as teachers to use websites to start building DL skills in our students:  
1.     1. Bring in website content to support textbook information. For example, using images or videos to illustrate or explain a teaching point.   
2.     2. Use websites to provide additional information   
3.     3. Produce worksheets with a limited number, but a variety of websites to practice what was taught  
4.     4. Allow students independent search for websites
5.     This post talks about how you can use websites in the classroom by creating Navigation Support Documents. (Other tasks that you can create using websites are discussed in later posts.

So here goes. 


External Documents or Navigation support documents (NSDs)
I got this idea from Craig, an ESL teacher who called them external documents. And oh boy! My students took it to another level! 

                   My first batch of students who indulged me and my experiments  

For the ESL teacher and learner, the internet is an abundance of resources. There are millions of websites already created for learning and teaching English. But these remain useless if students do not know where to locate them, when to use them or how to use them. Many students spend long hours searching for websites and once they find them, realise they have no idea how to use them. 

The job of the teacher here is simple: teachers need to be able to identify websites for students to access in order to achieve a learning objective. Once the teacher identifies websites that align with the learning objective and match the levels of students, he/she should be able to explain to students how to use those sites. This is what a navigation support document (NSD) does. 
If you would like to see an example before reading the description, please click here.  

So, how do we design a NSD? 

First step: Keep the objective specific and focused. (For example, I want to teach the use of reported speech. That's my learning objective.)

Second step: Identify websites or web pages** that help learners learn, practice and test this specific item. (To start with, choose around 3 sites for each activity of learning, practicing and testing reported speech.) 

** Note: Let me explain the difference between a website and a web page. Let's use the example of teaching reported speech. One website we can ask our learners to visit is 
https://learnenglish.britishcouncil.org/  This is a website. 

But how do the students locate 'reported speech' on this site? How do they know which lesson is right for them? 
So instead, you give them the exact location where reported speech appears on the website.  
https://learnenglish.britishcouncil.org/grammar/intermediate-to-upper-intermediate/reported-speech-1-statements This takes you to a web page. 
The web page is located inside a website. Web page links are easier for young or novice learners since it takes them directly to the lesson they're supposed to do. 
You can share links to websites if you want your students to acquire additional skills of searching and retrieving information from websites. End of note**  

Third step: Once you identify websites or web pages, copy and paste these links on a Microsoft Word document. (Remember, the links need to be clickable.)

Fourth step: Write clear instructions to guide students to move through these links – what should they do first, second, third, etc.  

Fifth step: Share the document with your students via email or WhatsApp or class FB page.  

The NSD is a Word document that lists links and also gives instructions on how to use these links. Here is an example for an NSD for teaching simple past tense.  

Here's another NSD for reading and use of linking words. 

Note: All the NSDs I shared above are open educational resources (OERs) uploaded on www.oercommons.org You're free to use them as and how you want. Though I've modified and updated all of them, many of them were originally created by my student teachers who I've acknowledged on the resource.  

                                          We'll talk about OERs in another post.  

Take a close look at the NSDs I shared above. You'd notice that they use multiple web pages as
  1.        Warm up activity
  2.         Presentation
  3.        Practice
  4.         Application/ Evaluation/ Wrap-up
I usually ask student teachers to choose web pages following roughly the present-practice-produce (or test) model. 

For teaching the skills of reading, speaking or writing you can follow the pre- while- post model. Take a look at an NSD to teach reading. This follows the pre-reading, while-reading and post-reading model. 


Here’s a summing up: 
  • A navigation support document (NSD) can be created using MS Word. It is an electronic document that is a collection of web page/website links. 
  • NSD helps you to collect and send to your students web resources that can help them acquire a specific learning objective.
  • NSD makes web content relevant for students by delivering clear instructions on how to use each link.
  • NSD helps learners navigate through multiple sites in order to achieve a learning goal/ objective.
  • Using a navigation support document (NSD) can promote digital literacy in our students. 
Read on if you'd like to know how we can also go beyond an NSDYou can enhance the value of NSDs by adding your own activities to it. 

So, at the end of an NSD, you can add  
  • a "Handout" you put together of points to remember, 
  • a "Worksheet" created by you for students to practice, or 
  • a "Test" designed by you that you want them to complete and return. 

This way, the NSD becomes a complete learning package. Or a learning object.**

** Note: A learning object is a collection of digital content that includes teaching items, practice items and assessment items, combined to deliver a single learning objective.

1. A learning object is an entire module that has a clear objective and can be used for self-learning. 
2. It is self-contained since it is a complete package that includes instruction, practice and assessment. 
3. A learning object is made of authentic materials. 
4. It is reusable. Many learning objects can be put together or aggregated to form a complete course. 
5. It can be cross linked with other modules, courses or even subjects. 

Learning objects are of relevance to the online teacher because they are made best possible through technology. End of note**  

An example for a learning object would be an audio or video of live/ recorded lecture + a navigation support document + a task using a web 2.0 tool.

Take a look at the following reported speech activities on oercommons. 

https://www.oercommons.org/courseware/lesson/65816 - NSD
https://www.oercommons.org/courseware/lesson/65819 - Handout
https://www.oercommons.org/courseware/lesson/65822 - worksheet  

Together they create a fantastic learning object to learn reported speech.   
    
Go on, slay it! 
Cheers. 

2 comments:

LS said...

Thank you madam for a clear explanation to design our lessons by creating NSD👍😇

Dr. Vindhya Singh Ghosh said...

Dr. Kshema, I found your blog post informative and useful.