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Deakin University to explore ways to bring digital writing into national English curriculum

TikTok, memes, blogs, podcasts and Instagram posts are set to take their place on the curriculum to revamp old-fashioned writing tasks.

TikTok and memes to earn place on national curriculum

TikTok, memes, blogs, podcasts and Instagram posts are set to take their place on the national English school curriculum, displacing “stale, old-fashioned” writing tasks.

Deakin University researchers have been given nearly half a million dollars by the Federal Government to explore ways to bring digital writing to the secondary school curriculum.

As well as analysing Romeo and Juliet in an essay, students of the future may be asked to script and design a TikTok about the play instead.

Lead research Lucinda McKnight said there was a sense of urgency about the need to update the way English is taught in schools and bring the curriculum “kicking and screaming into the 21st century”.

She said the approach did not involve ditching the classics but updating their teaching to involve digital writing opportunities that engaged students and was more relevant to their daily lives.

“This is important for student engagement and behaviour,” Dr McKnight said.

Macy and Inara get some early study in as digital writing looks set to hit the curriculum. Picture: Keryn Stevens
Macy and Inara get some early study in as digital writing looks set to hit the curriculum. Picture: Keryn Stevens

“We are anticipating the careers and workforce of the future and digital literacy is important for Australians moving forward.

“We are stuck with stale and old-fashioned formulaic essays such as those written for NAPLAN which have no audience and no purpose,” she said.

“It’s time for real writing not fake NAPLAN.”

Her comments come as students around the country are in the middle of NAPLAN testing.

Dr McKnight said students “could make a TikTok lesson featuring characters from Romeo and Juliet drawing on their knowledge and insight”.

“Or they could do a virtual reality script for a tour of the Shrine of Remembrance or create a personal profile for a professional networking site,” she said.

“And instead of writing a newspaper article, they could write a news blog or a podcast about the AFL or an Instagram post.”

She said students would still be required to stick to the same standards of grammar, spelling, paragraphing and sentence structure while producing content for these digital platforms.

Dr McKnight said the findings of the three- year study, which was funded by an Australian Research Council grant, would also apply to primary school content as well.

The study will involve a national survey of teachers and an examination of the national textbook archive to see what students have learnt previously and digital labs in schools to help form future policy and curriculum.

Digital content would not require students to be on social media platforms in ways that were not safe or private, Dr McKnight said.

The project comes as the latest version of the Australian curriculum has just been released after a lengthy review.

The project blog is teachingdigitalwriting.wordpress.com

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Original URL: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/education-victoria/deakin-university-to-explore-ways-to-bring-digital-writing-into-national-english-curriculum/news-story/7ce34a20293a1c92ed5755bafd61b2ad