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Youth Community Inquiry

New Media for Community and Personal Growth

Bertram Bruce Ann Peterson Bishop Nama R. Budhathoki

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Paperback

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English
Peter Lang Publishing Inc
31 March 2014
Youth Community Inquiry offers a detailed look at how young people use new media to help their communities thrive. Chapters address questions about learning, digital technology, and community engagement through the theory of community inquiry. The settings range from a small farming town, to a mostly immigrant community, to inner-city Chicago, and include youth from ages eight to 20. Going beyond works on social media in a narrow sense, the projects in these settings involve the use of varied technologies, such as GPS/GIS mapping tools, video production, use of archives and databases, podcasts, and Internet radio. The development of inquiry-based activities serves as a record of the diverse experiences and a guide to future projects. The book concludes with an overview of a curriculum that readers may adapt for their own settings.

Edited by:   , ,
Imprint:   Peter Lang Publishing Inc
Country of Publication:   United States
Edition:   New edition
Volume:   68
Dimensions:   Height: 225mm,  Width: 150mm, 
Weight:   310g
ISBN:   9781433124037
ISBN 10:   1433124033
Series:   New Literacies and Digital Epistemologies
Pages:   198
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Contents: Bertram C. Bruce: Community Inquiry – Ching-Chiu Lin/Karyn M. Mendoza: Youth Interests and Digital Media: 4-H Podcasting Program in Urbana Middle School – Alex Jean-Charles: New Media Technology: Tools of Expression/Repression in Communities – Nama R. Budhathoki/Bertram C. Bruce/Jill Murphy/Kimberly Rahn: Beyond Human Sensors: The Learning Instincts of Youth Using Geospatial Media – William Patterson/Shameem Rakha: «Now I Am College Material»: Engaging Students Through Living Reflections of Self-Identity as a Form of Pedagogy – Sally K. Carter/Shameem Rakha/Chaebong Nam – TAPping In: Education, Leadership, and Outright Gumption – Chris Ritzo/Mike Adams: Teen Tech, East St. Louis: Navigating New Community Partnerships – Jeff Bennett/Robin Fisher: The Learning Never Stops: Creating a Curriculum That Resonates Beyond the Classroom – Patrick W. Berry/Alexandra Cavallaro/Elaine Vázquez, Carlos R. DeJesús/Naomi García: (Re)voicing Teaching, Learning, and Possibility in Paseo Boricua – Chaebong Nam: Youth Asset Mapping: The Empowering and Engaging Youth Project (E2Y) – Jeanie Austin/Joe Coyle/Rae-Anne Montague: Creating Collaborative Library Services to Incarcerated Youth – Iván M. Jorrín-Abellán: A Needle in a Haystack: Evaluating YCI – Angela M. Slates/Ann Peterson Bishop: «It Takes a Community»: Community Inquiry as Emancipatory Scholarship, Indigenous Agency, Performative Inquiry, and Democracy Education – Martin Wolske/Eric Johnson/Paul Adams: Citizen Professional Toolkits: Empowering Communities Through Mass Amateurization – Lisa Bouillion Diaz: Youth Community Informatics Curriculum.

Bertram C. Bruce (PhD in computer science from the University of Texas) is Professor Emeritus at the University of Illinois. His many publications include Network-Based Classrooms; Electronic Quills; Libr@ries: Changing Information Space and Practice; and Literacy in the Information Age. Ann Peterson Bishop (PhD in information transfer from Syracuse University) is Associate Professor Emerita at the University of Illinois. She is the co-editor of Digital Library Use and co-author of chapters and articles in publications that include Library & Information Science Research and The Journal of Community Informatics. Nama R. Budhathoki (PhD in regional planning from the University of Illinois) directs Kathmandu Living Labs in Nepal. His interest and expertise lie at the intersection of digital media, civic engagement, and collective action, with particular focus on crowd-sourced mapping and social media.

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