Media and digital literacies in Canadian teacher educators’ open educational practices: A post-intentional phenomenology

Conclusion

“The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.” Alvin Toffler 

Toffler reminds me of the substantial impact of change in our current and modern times, particularly in the field of teacher education. If those who are teaching others to teach reading, writing, and a multitude of other skills, fluencies, competencies and literacies are not prepared to unlearn and relearn, we will fail future generations. It is through communicating, connecting, creating, and critically analyzing the process, products, and presentations of our teaching practices as teacher educators, and in striving to become media and digitally literate within open educational contexts, that the field of teacher education can honour our past while moving into the future.

          At the end of this dissertation process and production, I reflect that I engage in the heteroglossia (diverse voices within creative constructions), polyphony (unison of multiple elements including media constructions), and dialogism (dialogue required for change to occur) (Hoechsmann, 2019) through the construction of this research. The diverse voices and creative constructions, as artifacts of this research, are symbolic and evidential elements of MDL in the lived experiences of the participants, captured within and capturing a moment in time. It is through closer examination of the polyphony of elements of the media constructions – the interview recordings, transcripts, word cloud collection, media artifacts, and coding iterations - that a unifying harmony emerges. I consider this dissertation as an opportunity for ongoing and open disputatio and dialogism to occur (Hoechsmann,  in Mackenzie et al., 2023).

          Bakhtin's (1981) notion of "unfinalisability" reminds me that the research results, as well as the lived experiences of the participants, are entities in transition, changed and changing through this process of writing, feedback, and active reflection. It is through communication, connection, creativity and criticality that this transitional and liminal work continues to evolve.

          I understand that this research may be impacted by conceptions of teacher educators’ self-efficacy (Bandura, 2012; Taimalu & Luik, 2019) and teacher educators’ pedogogical beliefs about the importance of media and digital literacies, or conceptions of open education. While Taimalu and Luik (2019) investigate the use of technology among teacher educators, this was not related to, nor did it mention, OEPr. Teacher educators’ perceptions and lived experiences of MDL within their OEPr may be influenced by their confidence in their abilities to create and model media and digital literacies, and in their positive mindsets when using technologies within their teaching practice.

          While the path is set for this concluding section of this dissertation, it is up to you, the reader, to determine your way through this chapter. In the next section I share summaries of the sections and chapters that have already been shared, in an effort to refocus and crystallized this dissertation. I then share some contributions this dissertation makes to the fields of media and digital literacies, open educational practice, teacher education, and qualitative studies in education. This is followed by implications and limitations of this research, and concludes with some recommendations and final thoughts.

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