Based on the web literacy skills post I made earlier. Thanks to Doug Belshaw for the idea of laying it out like this. On the above, I haven’t changed anything since my earlier post, but he also added some ideas of alternative skills / etc. worth considering.
Nice. 🙂
Good start.
One other small addendum post that would help: list of the main source material this was derived from: Scratch list, Hackasurus list, etc. And of the people you’ve talked to most.
Also, might be good to build a wiki that has an index that makes sense of these articles if we don’t have already. Maybe: wiki.mozilla.org/badges/webliteracy
Yep, that’s part of the plan. 🙂
This is a great start. I think that this list can be refined for clarity. I understand that there are various nuances in the particular categories, however I find certain topics to meld a bit- or sound too close. For example: the concept of “open web” is could in theory be covered by ” remixing” ” collaborative making” ” designing for the web” and “sharing”
Anyway, I look forward to talking about this on our webmaker community call more.
How would you relate Jenkin’s literacy skills to this diagram http://digitallearning.macfound.org/atf/cf/%7B7E45C7E0-A3E0-4B89-AC9C-E807E1B0AE4E%7D/JENKINS_WHITE_PAPER.PDF Page 4 ?
Great building blocks! A “Connecting” column might help outline the producer and consumer communities that the skill building will reach.
This is really useful to reference, could this be made ‘open’ and have a Creative common license to enable/encourage reuse and sharing from the outset (universal or attribution)? (3 terms of in this diagram used in the sentence : )
Just spotted the CC licence on bottom right…great