Building and Enhancing
Building and Enhancing
This topic explores several definitions of literacy and what being literate means in the
multiplicity of contexts in the 21st century, with the goal of raising awareness in students who
might be presently unaware of the evolving perspectives on literacy and giving teachers the
opportunity to pause and reflect on their own literacies even as they attempt to teach the new
literacies to their students.
Discussion
The word “literacy” stems from the word “literate”, which first appeared in the 15 th
century and is in turn derived from the Latin word litteratus, meaning “a person marked
letters” – that is, “distinguish or identified by letters” – and it carried with it the idea that such
a person was cultured and educated.
Since the subjects of the time (e.g. grammar, logic, arithmetic, geometry, etc.) all had
written texts (which were composed of letters) that had to be studied, the ability to read and
write was therefore of prime importance, leading to the strong association of being “literate”
with the ability to read and write.
Miller (1973) states that conventional concept of literacy is divided into three-sub
categories:
1. Basic Literacy – it has the ability to correspond visual shapes to spoken sounds in
order to decode written materials and translate them into oral language. In other
words, it is the ability to recognize letters and words, even without understanding
what it means. For example, b-a-s-a in Filipino.
2. Comprehension literacy – it is the ability to understand the meaning of what is being
read. For example, basa can mean either “to read” or “to be wet”.
3. Functional or Practical literacy – it is the ability to read (e.i., decode and comprehend)
written materials needed to perform everyday vocation tasks. This the equivalent of
reading the text “Ang bata ay nagbabasa.” And being able to understand that basa
here refers to reading and not being wet.
The conventional view of literacy has two things for literacy to exist:
Without a text, there would be nothing to read; without meaning, the text is reduced to a
series of incomprehensible doodles.
Despite the ubiquity of the traditional view of literacy, Roberts (1995) says that, “in
the past 50 years, hundreds of definitions of literacy have been advanced by scholars, adult
literacy workers, and programme planners,” with even the UN Educational, Scientific, and
Cultural Organization (UNESCO, 2006) acknowledging that literacy as a concept has proven
to be complex and dynamic, it being continually defined and interpreted in multiple ways.
In this vein, Mkandawire (2018) more succinctly posits that literacy is “a form of
knowledge, competence, and skills in a particular field or area,” being supported by
UNESCO (2006), Barton (2007), and Mkandawire, Simooya-Mudenda, & Cheelo (2017),
which acknowledge that - as we have just pointed out – modern views appear to equate
literacy with knowledge
This shift in the definition of literacy from “reading and writing” to “knowledge” is
especially important as we explore the “new” literacies of the 21 st century that seem far-
removed from the contexts upon which conventional literacy is based.
Technologies like blogging and vlogging, social networking, and even text-messaging
change and expand both the extent and the form of our communication-blending text, sound,
and images in ways unforeseen and unprecedented (Richardson, 2014).
Three things have been critical in the rise of the new literacies:
1. Increased Reach – we are communicating with more people, from more diverse
cultures, across vaster distances than ever before.
2. Increased Means of Communication – we are communicating in more ways and at
faster speeds than ever before.
3. Increased Breadth of Content – we are communicating about more things than ever
before.
Answering such complex questions requires new sets of skills and knowledge - ones that
occur in the school system have never had to teach before. With these changes in with whom,
how, and why we communicate, new literacies are required not only to make sense of the
changes, but also to use these new technologies and paradigms in meaningful and productive
ways – something required not only of students, but of teachers as well.
SUMMARY
● Traditional literacy is the ability to read and write.
Name: Date:
Course/Yr/Section: Score:
Exercise
Compare and contrast the traditional concept of literacy to the modern view of
literacy. Use the venn diagram. (20pts).
Lesson Planning and Lesson Demonstration: Prepare and deliver a lesson that
incorporates some of the new literacies. (20pts).
Reflection
3. Which of the new literacies are you knowledgeable in? Which of the new literacies do
you lack knowledge in?
4. As a pre-service teacher, what kind of written materials should you be able to read
and understand? Are you reading these materials? How well can you understand
them?
Suggested Readings
Erickson, K., & Koppenhaver, D. (2020). Teaching Students Significant Disabilities to Read
and Write. Comprehensive Literacy For All.
Alata, E. & Ignacio, E. (2019). Building and enhancing new literacies across the curriculum,
first edition. Rex Book Store, INC.
Barton, D. (2007). Literacy: an introduction to the ecology of written language. Oxford, UK:
Blackwell.
Miller, G. A. (1973). Linguistic communication: perspective for research. Newark, Del.:
International Reading Association.
Mkandawire, S. B. (2018). Literacy versus language: Exploring their similarities and
differences. Journal of Lexicography and Terminology, 2(1).
Richardson, W. (2014). New literacies in the classroom. Retrieved from
https://modernlearners.com/new-literacies-in -the-classroom.