VWBPE 2016: Putting the Language back into Language Engagement
COMMUNITIES OF PRACTICE (SL)
Second Life
http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Idahonia/135/20/26
FIELD PRACTICES
Lecture
Caledonia Skytower (Avatar)
Via Dr. Doris Molero
Get Started for FREE
Sign up with Facebook Sign up with X
I don't have a Facebook or a X account
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Dr. Doris Molero's curator insight,
March 13, 2016 6:59 PM
Language is an ever-evolving, rich expression of who we are as people, as cultures, and as moments in history. Understanding the language of Shakespeare and Yeats helps us understand their hearts, their times, and the issues that shaped them. Such knowledge equips us to face the challenges of our own age and create new stories for future generations. To meet this potential, language arts learning must challenge itself to be more than a simple trip from “once upon a time…” to “and they lived happily ever after.”
Caledonia Skytower will explore the unique properties of virtual worlds for language arts including accessibility, immersion, and social interaction. There are not a few challenges too: technological barriers and respect for copyright. Using a “three dimensional Power-Point,” she will explore the possibilities in not only providing the skin and sinew of a plot line, but the very bones and muscle of language itself following the ancient tradition of the bards. Where could immersive language arts be taken on a virtual platform? Come, gather round the fire and explore the possibilities. Caledonia shares her experiences in building dynamic language arts virtual programming from the work of Seanchai Libraries. Session Objectives Virtual worlds are rich in opportunities for language arts learning. It’s easy to envision them as stand alone constructs that learners navigate to an educational end game. That is certainly one valid path. Another equally valid path is a re-creation of the skin and sinew of a plot which learners can wander through. Caledonia Skytower of Seanchai Libraries asks the questions: Are these the only virtual options for language arts education? In a time when we see language evolving into single character expressions of syllables and words, where is the place in a virtual learning experience for F. Scott Fitzgerald, and Herman Melville? All over grids you can find clever, beautiful, informative creations. Many of them are empty when you visit. Does that really meet the potential of the virtual platform as an educational and cultural tool? This session will touch on several approaches now in use for language arts learning, while focusing on the live spoken word as a dynamic, socially interactive method for engagement in a virtual environment.
Sign up to comment
|