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Michelle Schira Hagerman

Michelle Schira Hagerman
Michelle Schira Hagerman
Associate Professor
Teacher Education Program Director


Room
LMX 338
Phone
613-562-5800 ext. 4398


Through her research, Michelle Schira Hagerman examines the complexities of digital literacies learning, teaching and research practices in contexts of schooling. Using the Dual Level Theory of New Literacies (Leu et al., 2013; 2018) she has worked to describe how adolescents learn to critically evaluate and synthesize what they understand as they conduct research on science topics in school. She also studies the digital literacies skills, strategies, and mindsets that students leverage through digital-physical making activities in their classrooms and dedicated making spaces at school. Through this research she is working to develop critical practices that enable all students to leverage their voices, their interests, and their many linguistic and cultural assets to show who they are and what they understand. A first-generation university graduate who grew up on a farm in rural southwestern Ontario, she is also developing a line of inquiry that examines the complexities of digital literacies instruction in rural Ontario classrooms. She is interested in how to close digital skills and empowerment divides for rural youth through the implementation of culturally relevant, evidence-based interventions that support the learning of foundational digital literacies skills, strategies, and mindsets. Professor Hagerman teaches courses at the undergraduate and graduate levels focused on the critical and strategic use of digital technologies to support student learning and literacies. She is the Director of edstudiO, an innovative teaching and research lab where preservice teacher candidates and graduate students learn to teach and conduct research in a dynamic, flexible, and accessible environment while using various digital and physical tools and materials. She is a researcher with the , creator of Learning to Teach Online,  and co-creator of the based on the Ontario Language Arts Curriculum for Grades 4-6.

Books

Spiro,R. J., DeSchryver, M., Hagerman, M. S., Morsink, P. & Thompson, P. (2015). 

Journals & other

Hughes, J. M., Morrison, L. J., Robb, J. A., & Hagerman, M. S. (2023). 鈥淚t Feels Like I Have a Camera in My Eye鈥: New Methods for Literacies Research in Maker-oriented Classrooms. Frontiers in Education, 8.  

Kiili, C., R盲ikk枚nen, E., Br氓ten, I., Str酶ms酶, H. & Hagerman, M.S. (2023). Examining the structure of credibility evaluation when sixth graders read online texts. 鈥疛ournal of Computer Assisted Learning. 鈥  

Morrison, L., Becker, S., Hughes, J., Jacobsen, M., & Hagerman, M.S. (2022).鈥 Supporting teachers鈥 understanding of innovative maker pedagogies during a pandemic through the design of ethical and relational online professional learning.鈥疘n M. Jacobsen & C. Smyth (Eds.) Online learning and teaching from kindergarten to graduate school (pp.198-227). Canadian Association for Teacher Education.  

Kiili, C., Br氓ten, I., St酶ms酶, H., Hagerman, M.S., R盲ikk枚nen, E., & Jyrkiainen, A. (2022). Adolescents鈥 credibility justifications when evaluating online texts. Education and Information Technologies.  

Hagerman, M.S., Cotnam-Kappel, M., Turner, J.-A., & Hughes, J.M. (2022) Literacies in the Making: Exploring elementary students鈥 digital-physical meaning-making practices while crafting musical instruments from recycled materials. Technology, Pedagogy and Education, 31  

Hagerman, M.S. (2017), Disrupting Students鈥 Online Reading and Research Habits: The LINKS Intervention and Its Impact on Multiple Internet Text Integration Processes, Journal of Literacy and Technology, 18 (1), 115-156.

Turner, K. H., Jolls, T., Hagerman, M.S., O'Byrne, W.I., Hicks, T., Eisenstock, B., & Pytash, K.E. (2017), , Pediatrics, 140 (2).

Hagerman, M.S. (2017), , Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy, 61 (3), 319-325.