University Institution for Teacher Education
E-mail: jacques.kerneis@bretagne.iufm.fr
In this article, we compare three projects about mapping digital-, media- and information literacy in France. For this study, we first used the concept of “apparatus” in Foucauldian (1977) and Agambenian sense (2009). After this analysis, we called on Bachelard (1932) and his distinction between phénoménotechnique and phénoménographie. The first project began in 2006 around a professional association (Fadben: http://www.fadben.asso.fr/), with the main goal being to distinguish 64 main concepts in information literacy. This work is now completed, and we can observe it quietly through publications. The second project emanates from a research group (GRCDI: http://culturedel.info/grcdi/) that is still active. In 2011, GRCDI produced a status report, including future perspectives, which introduced the idea of transliteracy (media and information culture).The third project (Limin-R: http://www.iscc.cnrs.fr/spip.php?article1115) is an open group (media, information, computer science) with support from CNRS. We aim at mapping the web around these concepts, and in all three projects wiki tools have been used, which has been important for the success and limits of the collective action. This paper presents highlights and lessons learned, as well as ideas for further development.
Outline:
This article aims to present to an international public some research on media and information literacy using key concepts. We have chosen to look at them through the constructs of apparatus and phénoménologie. Thus, we will be able to see the heuristic contribution of this Wittgensteinian analysis (looks like a duck or a rabbit).
The phenomena of Web 2.0 are phénoménotechniques (production of pnenomna) (Bachelard, 1932), and understanding them needs an “archaeology of knowledge”, which is defined as ananalytical method that determines the boundaries of thought in a given domain and period (Foucault, 1969). This is the reason why we will present our three research projects in different perspectives.
The first one is to look at these projects as an apparatus through Foucault, who said:
What I’m trying to pick out with this term is, firstly, a thoroughly heterogeneous ensemble consisting of discourses, institutions, architectural forms, regulatory decisions, laws, administrative measures, scientific statements, philosophical, moral and philanthropic propositions – in short, the said as much as the unsaid. Such are the elements of the apparatus. The apparatus itself is the system of relations that can be established between these elements. Secondly, what I am trying to identify in this apparatus is precisely the nature of the connection that can exist between these heterogeneous elements.” (1977)
We will attempt to show what kind of apparatus each project is. We can tell immediately that “dispositif” is a French concept, and if Foucault was translated as “apparatus” in English, this choice is not so obvious, while “dispositif “is translated differently, even in the same book, as “device”, “machinery”, “apparatus”, “construction” and “deployment”. Agamben’s praxeologic definition of the apparatus is the most insightful for us:
I shall call an apparatus literally anything that has in some way the capacity to capture, orient, determine, intercept, model, control, or secure the gestures, behaviors, opinions, or discourses of living beings. Not only, therefore, prisons, madhouses, the panopticon, schools, confession, factories, disciplines, judicial measures, and so forth (whose connection with power is in a certain sense evident), but also the pen, writing, literature, philosophy, agriculture, cigarettes, navigation, computers, cellular telephones and--why not--language itself, which is perhaps the most ancient of apparatuses. (2009, 14)
In other words, our question will be how each project is a “various institutional-, physical- and administrative mechanisms, as well as knowledge structures that enhance and maintain the exercise ofpowerwithin the social body.”
In a second step, we will see how these projects contribute to an architecture of knowledge in Salaun’s perspective (2012), who cites Richard Saul Wurman (1976):
Thought “architecture” was a better way of describing what I thought was the direction that more people should look into for information, and I thought the explosion of data needed an architecture, needed a series of systems, needed systemic design, a series of performance criteria to measure it.
In this perspective, our point of view will be the phénoménotechnique described by Bachelard. Indeed, “one of the most interesting of his philosophy is the erosion of the boundary between the theoretical and the technical part of science” (Chimisso, 2008, 386). In fact, for Bachelard, scientific phenomena are today caused by instruments, particularly instruments of inscriptions (Latour and Woolgar, 1979).
However, Bachelard does not impose only approach as stated by Castelao-lawless (1995, 58): “Finally, because it accepts that both the study of each science and of each stage of development of science require different types of philosophical and historical analysis, it opens the way of pluralistic models of scientific explanation.”
Finally, Bachelard distinguishes the production of phenomenon (phénoménotechnique) and the (high)lighting that he calls phénoménographie.
After this section centred on theoretical tools, we presented the three projects in chronological order by relying on the concepts we have defined. The first began in 2006.
Two teachers (Ballarini-Santonocito and Duplessis) with a group of “professeurs-documentalistes” (teacher-librarians), a specificity of the French education system, worked on an online search.
They built a map with the concepts used in this activity. The production apparatus is like action research. The phénoménographique used a specific instrument of inscription: map minding, like in Figure 1.
Figure 1: A map of the online search
After that, this small team, including a third researcher (Serres), built a dictionary consisting of a culture of information, especially for “professeurs-documentalistes”. They aimed to overlay the field and spot 133 concepts for a first base of knowledge to teach, which was adapted to the level of education. For this work, the inscriptions were brought forth using a private wiki.
The difference between phénoménotechnique and phéoménographie is never easy, on account of goings and comings, but here for this last part of the project, we can identify a particular production: 64 main concepts, including seven core ones (information, document, source, indexation, information space, information search and information exploitation). This phénoménotechnique work was published by a professional association (Fadben) in a professional journal called Mediadoc (2007). Here, we propose two inscriptions of the core concepts: the concept of source (Figures 2 and 3).
Figure 2: A map of a main concept: Source
Figure 3: A didactic approach of source
This huge work was necessary in the first place, as quite a few “professeurs-documentalistes” have used it, but not really the institution. It is the production of activists, and they take care to ensure direct links with teaching. We can remark that this work only mentions information culture, and says nothing at all about media culture. However “source” is not the same concept in these two cultures.
Another aspect of this first apparatus is the small place for archaeological aspects, and the culture of information is not really positioned relative to information literacy. This work was done by le Deuff, who distinguished among three aspects of literacy (Figure 4) and their main features.
Figure 4: Three aspects of literacy - Olivier Le Deuff
Figure 5: Culture of information vs. Information literacy
An important aspect of these apparatuses is to feed the second and the third projects, as we shall proceed to demonstrate.
The second project was produced by a research group created in 2007 (GRCDI: Groupe de recherche sur la culture et la didactique de l’information. http://culturedel.info/grcdi/) that is still active, and in 2011 we produced an outlook report (media, digital and information culture and education).
Here, the production apparatus is different, as the group consisted of researchers and other different types of actors (mostly librarians, but mainly “professeurs-documentalistes” in secondary schools and high schools). The group was not affiliated with a lab, but took part in ERTE, a national research programme during the period from 2006-2009.
At the beginning, the primary aim of this group was to make an archaeology of information culture and didactic reflections. This is why we wrote an important report within a collaborative work, and extracted 12 recommendations (Figure 6).
Here, the phénoménographique aspect is based on a blog, presenting more than 150 texts from all the members of GRCDI and completed by a private wiki for writing the report. The phénoménotechnique aspect of this group is an annual seminar gathering researchers and teachers.
Figure 6: 12 recommendations published on the blog
This complete apparatus aimed to open very quickly to other cultures (digital, computer, media…). Therefore, we can show the overlap of some aspects of these different cultures. So, after Alan Liu in the US (Santa Barbara University) and Sue Thomas in Great Britain (De Montfort University), we have introduced the idea of transliteracy in France. We used the definition of the latter author.“Transliteracy is the ability to read, write and interact across a range of platforms, tools and media from signing and orality through handwriting, print, TV, radio and film, to digital social networks. (Thomas, 2007)
This topic was on the menu of the 5th seminar of GRCDI in September 2012, and this idea was further developed by another group, Limin-R, which was created in 2010 to focus on this issue.
We discussed the Limin-R project (2010-11), “Literacies: medias, information and digital studies”, in the previous section, which is explicitly connected with a previous project: The ERTE: Technological Research in Education Task Force: “Information Literacy and curriculum in documentation” (2006‐2010), and finished with an International symposium: Information Literacy Education (October 16‐18, 2008) at the University Charles de Gaulle Lille 3.
This apparatus was funded by CNRS (PIR) for the period from 2010‐2011, and operated by various research laboratories or groups: CREW, PREFics GRCDI, STEF, GERIICO‐ ISCC and IMS. This objective was to operate a prior census of academic works on the concept of “information” related to media, information and computer literacies, and to produce an interdisciplinary research restructuration of the three separate fields (overlapping concepts, methodologies and finalities).
The phénoménotechnique of this project is based on a platform (Figure 7) and a glossary. As in the first project, the first word put to work was “source”, but here in various senses.
Figure 7: A private platform website: Aladoc
Figure 8: Turn and return
The main interest of this work is based on the turn and return shuttle process between these two inscription instruments (Figure 8).
Here, we only propose two maps produced by the research team (Figures 9 and 10).
Figure 9: Keyword map of experts
Figure 10: Co-occurrences between “information” and other words on the web
The insertion in academic circuits has consequences at the level of the involvement of people who are not researchers. It is also the reason why this group, which is directed by the main professors: Divina Frau-Meigs (media), Eric Delamotte (information & knowledge literacy and Eric Bruillard (computer literacy), aims to create an association and review for the phénoménographie aspects.
Hence, we can already find a first publication on the INA site (Institut National de l’Audiovisuel) called “l’éducation aux cultures de l’information[i]” that lays the emphasis on “translittératie” (à la French), which is open to numeracy and visual cultures.
Currently, an ANR (French National Research Agency) project takes over for four years (2013-2016), though only with researchers from four labs: CREW, STEF, GERIICO and IMS, but with a convention that will allow all the other partners of LIMIN_R to be involved. The project aims at continuing the various trends of investigation already described.
Three research questions are proposed by this reconstructed group:
1 - What new sharing of competences between these three disciplinary fields do these uses of transliteracy generate?
Through an analysis of the old and new forms of engagement with information evinced by young people, the purpose is to check and qualify their viability and their finalities.
2 - What are the new collective dynamics, on the scale of the school and of the territory, that may be set up with the development of the transliteracy in learning events with varied configurations?
The purpose is to explore the new issues that may arise at the articulation between the individual and the collective, and in the digital space as much as in the geographical space.
3 - What are the political and educational options that might appear to reach a fully-fledged transliteracy?
The purpose is to identify and qualify the practices and the uses of transliteracy currently in development, as they could lead to new reconfigurations of the three scientific domains involved to unheard of processes of regulation, as well as to shifts in the borders between private and public uses.
These three questions lead to four tasks:
T1: Mapping “information” in the three fields considered, via a dedicated search engine;
T2: Observing transliteracy situations in both semi-formal and non-formal settings;
T3: Processing the collected data to identify strategies for transliteracy in “information cultures”;
T4: Modelling conceptual relations linking transliteracy, knowledge building and e-learning.
This attractive programme shows that the research apparatus became more structured and more related with empirical fields by dint of cooperative design. The balance between phénoménotechnique and phénoménographique seems to be a good way to ensure that.
Beyond this chronological presentation, it is clear that these three types of apparatus must continue together, and that it is primordial at best to articulate these two inseparable Bachelardian dimensions of research. In conclusion, we can write that this particular manner of describing theses three projects allows a focus on important aspects, but at the same time prevents us from seeing other aspects of projects, such as, for example, their social value.
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Teacher at the IUFM (University Institution for Teacher Education) located in Brittany
Email: jacques.kerneis@bretagne.iufm.fr
Webpage: http://cread.bretagne.iufm.fr/spip.php?article445
Post-school qualifications:
PhD in Didactics and Communication (Université Rennes 2) (2009)
CAPES (Teacher Certificate for Secondary Education) of documentation (1995).
Positions held:
IUFM de Bretagne: Teacher trainer (2007/2013)
Secondary lower schools in Fouesnant and Quimper Teacher of documentation (1995/2007)
Primary schools in Brest and Quimper (1985/1995)
All my thanks to Martine Kervran, Divina frau Meigs and Mauri Sauslaff for their proofreading.
http://www.iscc.cnrs.fr/spip.php?article1115
http://www.ina-sup.com/ressources/dossiers-de-laudiovisuel/les-e-dossiers-de-laudiovisuel/e-dossier-leducation-aux-cultures