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LILLIAN VEGA CASTANEDA, CSU CHANNEL ISLANDS MARIO EUGENIO CASTANEDA, CSU LOS ANGELES ROSARIO DIAZ GREENBERG, CSU SAN MARCOS AERA, APRIL 13, 2012 Social networking and other digital media as a tool for teaching and learning about diversity

Social networking and other digital media as a tool for teaching and learning about diversity

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Social networking and other digital media as a tool for teaching and learning about diversity . Lillian Vega Castaneda, CSU Channel Islands Mario Eugenio Castaneda, CSU Los Angeles Rosario Diaz Greenberg, CSU San Marcos AERA, April 13, 2012. Research Questions. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

LILLIAN VEGA CASTANEDA, CSU CHANNEL ISLANDS

MARIO EUGENIO CASTANEDA, CSU LOS ANGELES

ROSARIO DIAZ GREENBERG, CSU SAN MARCOS

AERA, APRIL 13, 2012

Social networking and other digital media as a tool

for teaching and learning about diversity

Page 2: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

Research Questions

We set out to describe & analyze the use of social networking & other digital media as a tool to support learning about diversity in 6 university level courses.

We focus on the following research questions: How do students use social media, You Tube, the world-wide web and other

electronic tools to advance the conversation on difference and cultural diversity?

What types of issues did students raise with respect to difference and cultural diversity?

In what way did the use of such media promote or inhibit the conversation? How did students assess their learning in this context?

Page 3: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

Context

Three public universities in southern California;Campuses include one suburban/rural, one suburban and

one large urban campus;All 3 of the campuses are Hispanic Serving Institutions.

Page 4: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

SAMPLE

Data was collected from students:- enrolled in two pre-requisite cultural diversity class (45

students)- two secondary social studies methods classes

(31 students) - two bilingual/bi-literacy education classes (28 students)- 68 females & 36 males

Page 5: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

Data Collection

Data was collected during the 2010 – 2011 AY. Qualitative methods were used to examine a variety of data sources,

including interviews, participant response journals, on-line entries and a student self-assessment of learning assignment and diversity (media) critiques.

A closed Facebook group was created for all classes. The professor of record was the administrator of the group.

Students were given guidelines for making posts to the groups as noted in the course syllabus. (See Appendix)

Online entries were made on Facebook, course discussion thread on Blackboard & BB blog (e.g., news items, websites, news articles, YouTube).

Follow-up interviews (20)

Page 6: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

Findings: Emerging Themes

- Deconstructing diversity messages (content &

representation)- Diversity of “diversity & difference” issues- Media as “diversity” 24/7- Media – increased access to “walk in someone else’s

shoes”

Page 7: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

Expanding (and continuing) the Conversation

“Not just another way to make me feel guilty about “being white” (on the use of social media and other media in learning about diversity).

Page 8: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

Continuing the Conversation: Language

Posts and discussions related to language use in schools, most notably related to ELL students; often a choice of conversation in the primary language courses but also addressed in the social studies and diversity courses.

How young children learn about language? (the linguistic genius of babies)

Language rights and use of home language in schools

Page 9: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

CONTINUING THE CONVERSATION: LATINA/O STUDENTS

Treatment of “illegal aliens” in the US- Dream Act- Financial Aid- YouTube and other video related to Latino university

students- Arizona Immigration Law- Alabama Immigration Law

Page 10: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

ADVANCING & EXPANDING THE CONVERSATION: LGBT

Transgender students in & out of school (often displayed in news articles posted on Facebook with links, including YouTube, Oprah Winfrey Network (Lisa Ling)

Heterosexism (e.g., the Android APP on “How do I know if my son is gay?”)

LGBT youth, hate crimes & the internetSexuality & gender identification in young children as it

impacts the child, parents, educator, siblings, etc.

Page 11: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

ADVANCING & EXPANDING THE CONVERSATION

School bullying – f2f, video, cyber, virtualSchool violence – (ongoing reports from recent stories

in Los Angeles to Columbine)Religion and impact on others – (e.g., Westboro Baptist

Church, Sharia Law, religious right)Depiction of girls in the media – as an equity concern

(e.g., JC Penny’s Ad on a girl’s t-shirt, “I’m too pretty to do homework.”)

Page 12: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

Advancing and Expanding the Conversation

Disability and equity concerns (e.g., autism reform)Sponge Bob Square Pants – and kid’s attention spanRevisiting Civil Rights (where are we? How do we

teach about it?)

Page 13: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

Promoting & Inhibiting the Conversation?

Promoting –- Access to the media 24/7 as helping to expand the

conversation across various equity issues (ongoing)- An expanded conversation regarding diversity & equity as

it relates to current events at the local, national and international levels

- Diversity and human rights- Diversity and practice (how I teach this?)

Page 14: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

Inhibiting the Conversation?

Several students objected to the Facebook requirement (e.g., I never use Facebook, my husband doesn’t want me to have a Facebook account, I don’t own a computer)

Several students did not want anybody (beyond the class) to read their posts

Facebook and other media as an invasion of privacy

Page 15: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

SELF ASSESSMENT OF LEARNING

Staying informed on current events because of the use of social and other media as part of the curriculum

Increased awareness of the treatment of individuals from under-represented groups (eg., local, state, national)

“The more I see the world, the less I know”Social media as helping with becoming culturally

competent

Page 16: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

SELF ASSESSMENT OF LEARNING

- Took information to other classes and vice-versa- Segregation and intolerance continues- “We all have a story to tell and our students are no

different”- Facebook – not a direct topic of the course – “but it

changed my perspective on how social media can be used to benefit students.”

Page 17: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

SELF ASSESSMENT VIA QUESTIONING

Was justice served?Whose perspective and/or story or experience is affirmed?What assumptions do we make about a given community?

About the children? How do we teach about these important topics? How do

we reflect painful history into the curriculum? How do we teach about GLBT issues as it is now required in the California social studies curriculum?

Page 18: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

CONCLUSION & NEXT STEPS

- Use of social media – extended the student’s understanding of diversity, beyond (but including) ethnic, language and racial difference (continued conversation)

- Students connected course readings, hand-outs, discussions to items they shared via social media, course blogs, and also shared these items in written assignments.

- Most students saw value in connecting the social media requirement to the course content.

- This is a preliminary study & there is more work to be done.

Page 19: Social networking and other digital media as a tool  for teaching and learning about diversity

For a copy of this paper go to:

http://faculty.csuci.edu/lillian.castaneda/