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CompletedNEW LITERACIES AND GLOBAL/MULTICUTURAL LITERACYToggle submenu
o PartialINTRODUCTION TO 21st CENTURY LITERACIES
o Start21st CENTURY EDUCATION
o StartGLOBAL AND MULTI-CULTURAL LITERACY
CompletedSOCIAL LITERACY & FINANCIAL LITERACYToggle submenu
CompletedMEDIA LITERACY & CYBER/DIGITAL LITERACYToggle submenu
CompletedECOLITERACY & ARTS/CREATIVE LITERACYToggle submenu
CompletedINTEGRATING NEW LITERACIES IN THE CURRICULUMToggle submenu
CompletedMAJOR EXAMINATIONS
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NEW LITERACIES AND GLOBAL/MULTICUTURAL LITERACY
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OBJECTIVES
At the end of this module, the students should be able to:
1. Basic Literacy
Ability to correspond visual shapes to spoken sounds in order to decode written materials and
translate them into oral language.
Ability correspond letters and words.
2. Comprehension Literacy
Ability to understand the meaning of what is being read.
3. Functional or Practical Literacy
Ability to read (i.e., decodes and comprehend) written materials needed to perform everyday
vocational tasks. It stresses the acquisition of appropriate verbal, cognitive, and computational skills
to accomplish practical results in specific cultural settings dubbed as survival
literacy and reductionist literacy.
Ability of an individual to take part in significant activities in professional, social, political, and cultural
aspects in a society, where he/she lives using his/her literacy skills.
A new functional literacy aspect, called, specific literacy, is becoming a trend, in which the job of the
student is analyzed to see exactly the literacy skills needed and those that are only taught to prevent
job-skill mismatch.
Manuyo (2019) reported that based on the 2013 Functional Literacy, Education and Mass Media
Survey(FLEMMS), the country registered a 90.3 % rate which means that nine out of every 10
FIlipinos aged 10- 64 were functionally literate.
Based on this conventional view of literacy, we notice two things for reading (and therefore literacy)
to exist: (1) a text (consisting of symbols and grammar) to be read; and (2) a meaning or message
being communicated by the text for the reader to extract. Without a text, there would be nothing to
read; without meaning, the text is reduced to series of incomprehensible doodles.
It should therefore be noted that even in Miller’s definition of literacy, the act of reading implies a
level of understanding. Simply knowing how to say a word (or a series of words) is not the same as
being able to understand that it means. Without understanding of the meaning of the words, reading
has not taken place. Based on this, Schlechty (2001) defines concept of functional illiteracy as the
state of being able to read, but not well enough to manage daily living and employment tasks that
require reading skills beyond a basic level.
As the rest of this chapter will argue, this synchronicity between decoding textual symbols and being
able to extract and understand their meaning is a necessary part of being literate, even as the new
contexts of the 21st century change the nature of what the “text” is, and what it means to “read and
write.”
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.
How do we work together with people of different cultures who might have vastly different
perspective on communication, work ethics, values, religious beliefs, and worldviews? In an age
where information is power— where knowing more and knowing first can spell the difference
between success and failure— how do we leverage both current and emergent technologies so that
our endeavors are both productive and profitable? Moreover, how do we navigate and manage the
veritable minefield of information that was once considered taboo and private and is now online, for
all the world to see and to judge, whether we like it or not?
Answering such complex questions requires new sets of skills and knowledge— ones that our 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.
To better address the need for teachers to be literate in these new literacies , the definitions are
provided below.
Global and Multicultural Literacy
It discusses how our increasing ability to communicate with almost anyone, anywhere, in real time
requires new skills and attitudes in interaction with people with cultures, perspective, worldviews,
and priorities different from our own, particularly with the end-view of not only peace and
understanding, but also mutual benefit and productivity. An understanding on ethnic groups that
comprise the population and focuses on complex issues of identity, diversity and citizenship.
Social Literacy
It explores the development of social skills, knowledge and positive values in human beings to act
positively and responsibly in sophisticated complex social settings.
Media Literacy
It refers to the ability to access, analyze, evaluate, and create media.
Financial Literacy
It addresses the notorious problem of short-sightedness in Filipino culture regarding personal
finances and how this must be addressed at an increasingly earlier age to help mitigate the ever-
widening gap between the rich and the poor.
Cyber/Digital Literacy
It is the ability to effectively use digital devices for purposes of communication, expression,
collaboration, and advocacy in a knowledge-based society.
Eco-literacy
It explores the emerging demands for knowing how to effectively and sustainably manage the natural
resources that our increased industrialization and demands for productivity are so rapidly eating up.
It refers to the understanding of principles of ecosystems toward sustainability.
Creative Literacy
It explores how this increase in productivity also brings with it an increased demand for arts and
aesthetics and the need to develop ways of effectively communicating through the creative arts in
industries dominated by objective data.It Is the ability to make original ideas that have value and the
ability to see the world in new ways.
Critical Literacy
It addresses the increasing need to discern the underlying (and often tacit) messages behind the
new “texts” of the 21st century, particularly in an ever-increasingly multicultural society where ideas,
cultures, and ideologies vie with one another for power and dominance in the minds of the masses.
WRAP UP
This module introduces you to the various concepts of the 21st century literacies. We have also
discussed the traditional or conventional notion of literacy which can be divided into subcategories,
namely basic literacy, comprehension literacy, and functional/practical literacy.
New literacies have risen due to increased reach, increased means of communication, and
increased breadth of content. These new literacies are globalization and multicultural literacy, social
and financial literacy, media and cyber/digital literacy, eco-literacy, arts, and creativity literacy, and
critical literacy.