Lo‐tech tools as episteme: rethinking student engagement in the writing process and beyond
Issue Date
2016Subjects
student engagementwriting process
materiality
affordances
pedagogy
composition lo‐ tech
meaning making
play
W830 Prose Writing
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In this paper, five teacher‐scholars describe pedagogical inquiry into the use of ‘lo‐tech’ tools and what we discovered about the affordances of these tools. These include but are not limited to technologies like sticky notes that help students to organize written thoughts and physically move them around, crayons that allow students to highlight, trace, and categorize different types of thoughts on their paper, and index cards that they can use in a variety of interactive ways for their own writing and to write collaboratively. We found that the use of lo‐tech tools complemented our work with digital technology, engaging the kinesthetic learners in our classrooms and encouraging a spirit of play in students and teachers alike. We also discuss how teachers can encourage the use of lo‐tech tools epistemologically to help students process information, create knowledge, and to come to their own understandings or demonstrate understandings of course content ‐ with no product in mind other than knowledge‐making.Citation
Finer, B.S., Shelly, L., Gatta, O., Warmington, R., Alawdat, M. (2016) 'Lo‐tech tools as episteme: rethinking student engagement in the writing process and beyond'. Journal of pedagogic development 6 (1)Publisher
University of BedfordshireJournal
Journal of pedagogic developmentAdditional Links
https://journals.beds.ac.uk/ojs/index.php/jpd/article/view/258Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
2047-3265Collections
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