Using Virtual Reality in English Language Arts Education provides researched-based teaching practices and strong theoretical support for teaching English Language Arts with Virtual and Augmented Reality tools. It is perfect for teachers of any experience level, with or without prior experience with VR/AR.
New times. Expanded worlds. Emerging possibilities. In Using Virtual Reality in English Language Arts Education, authors from multiple institutions across the United States and abroad share practical insights for teaching English language arts with virtual and augmented realities. These chapters draw on multiple theories and ideas to share perspectives from practicing and prospective teachers, as well as young learners themselves, about how to use applications and tools to transform teaching and learning. Collectively, this book advances innovation for using virtual and augmented realities as educational, inclusive spaces for teaching English language arts and literacy subject matter while supporting learners in developing the mindset for creativity, innovation, and even emotional empathy.
Recenzijas
Virtual reality is already transforming media, industry, and entertainment. This important collection charts the affordances of this technology in ELA classroom contexts, ultimately challenges students and teachers to grapple with questions of power, identity, representation, and experience. -- Darren Covitz, Kennesaw State University, co-author Inside Out: Strategies for Teaching Writing and Grammar to Get Things Done In an era where we continue to question the role of technology for both remote and classroom-based learning, Clarice Moran and Mary Rice have created a collection in which ELA educators demonstrate how to span distancesboth physical and pedagogicalwith virtual and augmented reality tools. From historical sites to imagined futures, from national parks to enhanced scenes of our own communities, the authors in this collection remind us just how real AR/VR technologies can be for our students when integrated into instruction with passion and purpose. -- Dr. Troy Hicks, Central Michigan University
Part 1: Overview and Research: How can virtual and augmented realities
support teacher learning?
Chapter 1: A Review of the Literature on Virtual Reality: A New Frontier for
English Language Arts Teaching, Paige Jacobson
Chapter 2: VR Immersion in the ELA classroom: Supporting the Professional
Development of Novice Teachers, Christine Chang, Elisabeth Etopio, Erin
Kearney, and David Mawer
Chapter 3: So similar, but so different from my real-life classroom: Using
Augmented Reality in Teacher Learning to Facilitate Discussion in Diverse ELA
Classes, Jennifer M. Higgs, Megan E. Welsh, and Steven Z. Athanases
Part 2: Practical Applications: How can virtual and augmented realities
support student learning?
Chapter 4: How Am I Supposed to Teach This? Using Google Cardboards to
Enhance English Language Arts Learning, Clarice Moran
Chapter 5: Designing Engaging Virtual Field Trips for Secondary English
Language Art Students, Kelly Torres and Aubrey Statti
Chapter 6: Experiencing Literature in Virtual Reality, Christine Oughtred,
Louise Paatsch, and Anne Cloonan
Chapter 7: Engaging ELA Teacher Candidates with the Power and Possibility of
Geolocated Augmented Reality, William Wright
Part 3: Interdisciplinary Work in ELA Classrooms: What are the boundaries and
frontiers of virtual and augmented realities?
Chapter 8: Its the actual bomb!: Middle School Females using Virtual
Reality to Develop 21st Century Literacies, Rick Marlatt
Chapter 9: Integrating Culturally Responsive Pedagogy and Virtual Reality:
Preparing Preservice Educators for Secondary Language Arts Classes, Rebecca
Smith, Nichole Ralston, and Benjamin Gallegos
Chapter 10: Empowering Language Teachers with Emerging Technologies:
Augmented Reality for English Language Arts Classrooms, Babak Khoshnevisan
Afterword: Daydreaming of Equity and Virtual Reality, Dawn Whipple
Clarice M. Moran is assistant professor of English education at Appalachian State University.
Mary F. Rice is assistant professor of literacy at the University of New Mexico.