The journal, Learning, Media and Technology has just published an issue with focus on the theme, Learning, the Net Generation and Digital Natives. I have only had chance to scan the articles but it looks like a very interesting issue that adds to the growing body of research that is helping to provide us with an evidence-based understanding of how young people are using digital technologies and how leisure and academic uses are interconnected. The issue is edited by Chris Jones from the UK Open University, Institute of Educational Technology.
From the editorial:
The articles in this issue paint a complex picture of change amongst young people, a picture at odds with the idea of a Net Generation composed of Digital Natives. They address the ways that leisure and study activities intertwine and suggest new methods for research need to be adopted to complement the predominantly survey methods currently deployed. The articles show that young people at school and university use technologies in ways that are related to their purposes and exhibit a diversity that contrasts with the idea of a sharp generational change. The articles agree that there are significant age-related changes but they suggest that these changes are mediated by the active appropriation of technology by young people who act purposively and in relation to influential institutional contexts.
Unfortunately, the journal is not open access so if you don't have access through your institution, you will have to pay to read this publically-funded research.
Thanks to Tannis Morgan for bringing this to my attention.
1 comment:
Unfortunately we don't have access to the journal, but I think their choice of title for the theme was a mistake. From the editorial it sounds like they disagree with idea that there is a Net Generation and Digital Natives, but the title gives the opposite impression.
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