Facebook levels the playing field: Dyslexic students learning through digital literacies

Dyslexia has an ambivalent relationship with learning technology. Any potential gains may be nullified if the technology is perceived to exacerbate stigma. This paper examines the use of an ‘everyday’ technology, Facebook, by a small group of sixth form students labelled as dyslexic. ‘Levelling the...

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Main Author: Owen Barden
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association for Learning Technology 2014-02-01
Series:Research in Learning Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.researchinlearningtechnology.net/index.php/rlt/article/download/18535/pdf_1
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spelling doaj-0522db2289744a3dac24f750607249e72020-11-24T22:45:35ZengAssociation for Learning Technology Research in Learning Technology2156-70772014-02-0122011810.3402/rlt.v22.1853518535Facebook levels the playing field: Dyslexic students learning through digital literaciesOwen Barden0 Centre for Culture & Disability Studies, Liverpool Hope University, Liverpool, UKDyslexia has an ambivalent relationship with learning technology. Any potential gains may be nullified if the technology is perceived to exacerbate stigma. This paper examines the use of an ‘everyday’ technology, Facebook, by a small group of sixth form students labelled as dyslexic. ‘Levelling the playing field’ is a phrase the participants used often when discussing what they wanted from learning technology. Because dyslexia usually is defined in terms of significant difficulties with literacy, we might reasonably anticipate that the participants would see Facebook as stigmatising rather than levelling the playing field, because of the very public literacy events that it demands. However, the data indicate that far from shying away from Facebook because of fear of their difficulties with literacy being exposed, the participants enthusiastically embraced it. The students saw Facebook as a desirable presence in their education, one that supported inclusion. For them, levelling the playing field with Facebook had five dimensions: keeping up to date and meeting deadlines; increased control over learning; developing metacognitive awareness; greater control over literacy process and demands; and being experts and helpers. The findings perhaps challenge some assumptions about dyslexia, literacy and learning, and may be of interest to teachers working with dyslexic students, or researchers studying learning in digitally mediated social networks.http://www.researchinlearningtechnology.net/index.php/rlt/article/download/18535/pdf_1social networkingdigital literaciesdyslexiaadolescentinclusion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Owen Barden
spellingShingle Owen Barden
Facebook levels the playing field: Dyslexic students learning through digital literacies
Research in Learning Technology
social networking
digital literacies
dyslexia
adolescent
inclusion
author_facet Owen Barden
author_sort Owen Barden
title Facebook levels the playing field: Dyslexic students learning through digital literacies
title_short Facebook levels the playing field: Dyslexic students learning through digital literacies
title_full Facebook levels the playing field: Dyslexic students learning through digital literacies
title_fullStr Facebook levels the playing field: Dyslexic students learning through digital literacies
title_full_unstemmed Facebook levels the playing field: Dyslexic students learning through digital literacies
title_sort facebook levels the playing field: dyslexic students learning through digital literacies
publisher Association for Learning Technology
series Research in Learning Technology
issn 2156-7077
publishDate 2014-02-01
description Dyslexia has an ambivalent relationship with learning technology. Any potential gains may be nullified if the technology is perceived to exacerbate stigma. This paper examines the use of an ‘everyday’ technology, Facebook, by a small group of sixth form students labelled as dyslexic. ‘Levelling the playing field’ is a phrase the participants used often when discussing what they wanted from learning technology. Because dyslexia usually is defined in terms of significant difficulties with literacy, we might reasonably anticipate that the participants would see Facebook as stigmatising rather than levelling the playing field, because of the very public literacy events that it demands. However, the data indicate that far from shying away from Facebook because of fear of their difficulties with literacy being exposed, the participants enthusiastically embraced it. The students saw Facebook as a desirable presence in their education, one that supported inclusion. For them, levelling the playing field with Facebook had five dimensions: keeping up to date and meeting deadlines; increased control over learning; developing metacognitive awareness; greater control over literacy process and demands; and being experts and helpers. The findings perhaps challenge some assumptions about dyslexia, literacy and learning, and may be of interest to teachers working with dyslexic students, or researchers studying learning in digitally mediated social networks.
topic social networking
digital literacies
dyslexia
adolescent
inclusion
url http://www.researchinlearningtechnology.net/index.php/rlt/article/download/18535/pdf_1
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