The National Curriculum for Information & Communication Technology in
England and Wales, and its equivalent in other countries, makes it clear that
students must be able to amend their work for different audiences.
Unfortunately, there is little guidance on what an appropriate audience is, the
general consensus being that what matters is the size of the audience rather
than its makeup. This is not only nonsense, but does students absolutely no
favours.
In this article we look at:
Why audience matters.
Who is the right audience? (And how to reach it.)
This is closely related to an article about comments.
Why audience matters
Audience matters for the following reasons:
First, it provides context. In other words, one of the aspects by which a
piece of work is to be evaluated is its fitness for purpose. You cannot use that
criteria entirely unless you know the intended audience. In fact, there are two
aspects of fitness for purpose: an absolute one, and a relative one.
The absolute aspect is summed up in the question: "Does this do what it
purports to do?". For example, does this interest calculator spreadsheet
accurately calculate the interest payable? If it doesn't, or it gives incorrect
results, it cannot be said to be fit for purpose, regardless of the
audience.
The relative aspect is summed up in the question: "Is this suitable for the
intended audience?". If the spreadsheet (to continue with this example) is
intended for use by financial non-specialists, but is peppered with financial
jargon, then it fails this test.
Second, it provides an incentive to "get it right". Basically, if you're
doing something just for yourself, you may be tempted to take a "that'll do"
attitude, whereas having an audience can bring into play emotions like not
wanting to let others down, and not wanting to let yourself down in other
people's eyes.
Third, it can provide a source of comments. Comments are covered more
thoroghly in another article, but for now it is worth saying that comments have
to be from the right audience, manageable, and useful in themselves in order to
be worth having. Comments are, in fact, a form of assessment for learning, and
should therefore meet the criteria associated with that type of assessment.
Fourth, in many forms of accreditation the student has to demonstrate the
ability to take different audiences into account.
Who is the right audience?
Many bloggers seem to take the view that all that matters is numbers: the
bigger the audience the better. This lack of discernment and discrimination is
both disappointing and, more important, damaging to students' potential
achievement. It is essential to make students understand that there is a right
audience, and a wrong audience.
For example, if you instruct your students to create a technological solution
to a real-world problem faced by a local business of their choice, the right
audience is that business, not the whole world! In a less extreme example, if
the assignment is to create a story using only 6 photographs, the right audience
is potentially much broader, but still not infinite. In fact, I would argue that
if the audience turns out to be thousands of people, the assignment was poorly
defined in the first place.
Let's take that digital story example. What is the point of it? If it is to
see how creative students can be, perhaps the right audience is lovers of
English, which is far too broad. A much better approach would be to set the
context: let's say, instructions that have to be understandable by someone
whatever their language, and which have to posted in a small space, hence the
use of only a few pictures. So, where might this apply? Telephone kiosks;
cameras; a computer. By defining the context you start to define the audience,
and that makes it more likely that any feedback will be useful.
To conclude: the assignments you and your team set should be closely defined,
in terms of audience and context, even when the assignment is open-ended. How to
do that will be covered in an other article.