The Content

28 November 2005

Why Johnny and Janey Can't Read

What with being ill and then trying to catch up late in the semester, I've been away from blogging for a while. Today, however, I had the opportunity to give a lecture to the University of Toronto Senior Alumni Association, a group that believes that one's brain is like a muscle - it needs to be continually exercised to stay in shape.

I shared with them my thoughts on "Why Johnny and Janey Can't Read, and Why Mr. and Ms. Smith Can't Teach: The challenge of multiple media literacies in tumultuous times." The talk traced the thinking of the Toronto School of Communication. In doing so, I
introduce the notion that our beloved literacy is now nothing but a quaint notion, an aesthetic form that is as irrelevant to the real questions and issues of pedagogy today as is recited poetry – clearly not devoid of value, but equally no longer the structuring force of society. I will ask you to consider that our society’s obsessive focus on literacy would doom future generations to oblivion and ignorance, if only they cared a whit about what, and how, we think. Further, I am going to challenge the assumptive ground upon which our institutions of education – primary, secondary and tertiary – are built, and raise the real question of our time – and of any time – namely, what is valued as knowledge, who decides, and who is valued as authority.
The folks who attended were an attentive and engaged audience, asking many thought-provoking questions after the lecture, and raising many important issues for our time. I had a thoroughly enjoyable time, as I hope they did too.

As with almost all my stuff, it's available for download [pdf] and reuse under a Creative Commons license.


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3 comments:

Harold Jarche said...

Looking forward to reading it :-)

Anonymous said...

Mark - awesome essay, just found it in December 2007! Are you aware of any audio recording of your talk that we could share?

p.s. I don't really blog on the google platform required for identity here. I am mseyfang.edublogs.org .

Fang - Mike Seyfang

Mark Federman said...

Thanks, Mike. There isn't a recording of this talk, unfortunately - not many of my public performances are recorded.

If you like Johnny and Janey, a similar history with a different twist is the topic of How Do We Know? The changing culture of knowledge.

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