Digital Natives' (digital + native)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Beyond the ,digital natives' debate: Towards a more nuanced understanding of students' technology experiences

JOURNAL OF COMPUTER ASSISTED LEARNING, Issue 5 2010
S. Bennett
Abstract The idea of the ,digital natives', a generation of tech-savvy young people immersed in digital technologies for which current education systems cannot cater, has gained widespread popularity on the basis of claims rather than evidence. Recent research has shown flaws in the argument that there is an identifiable generation or even a single type of highly adept technology user. For educators, the diversity revealed by these studies provides valuable insights into students' experiences of technology inside and outside formal education. While this body of work provides a preliminary understanding, it also highlights subtleties and complexities that require further investigation. It suggests, for example, that we must go beyond simple dichotomies evident in the digital natives debate to develop a more sophisticated understanding of our students' experiences of technology. Using a review of recent research findings as a starting point, this paper identifies some key issues for educational researchers, offers new ways of conceptualizing key ideas using theoretical constructs from Castells, Bourdieu and Bernstein, and makes a case for how we need to develop the debate in order to advance our understanding. [source]


The ,digital natives' debate: A critical review of the evidence

BRITISH JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY, Issue 5 2008
Sue Bennett
The idea that a new generation of students is entering the education system has excited recent attention among educators and education commentators. Termed ,digital natives' or the ,Net generation', these young people are said to have been immersed in technology all their lives, imbuing them with sophisticated technical skills and learning preferences for which traditional education is unprepared. Grand claims are being made about the nature of this generational change and about the urgent necessity for educational reform in response. A sense of impending crisis pervades this debate. However, the actual situation is far from clear. In this paper, the authors draw on the fields of education and sociology to analyse the digital natives debate. The paper presents and questions the main claims made about digital natives and analyses the nature of the debate itself. We argue that rather than being empirically and theoretically informed, the debate can be likened to an academic form of a ,moral panic'. We propose that a more measured and disinterested approach is now required to investigate ,digital natives' and their implications for education. [source]


Beyond the ,digital natives' debate: Towards a more nuanced understanding of students' technology experiences

JOURNAL OF COMPUTER ASSISTED LEARNING, Issue 5 2010
S. Bennett
Abstract The idea of the ,digital natives', a generation of tech-savvy young people immersed in digital technologies for which current education systems cannot cater, has gained widespread popularity on the basis of claims rather than evidence. Recent research has shown flaws in the argument that there is an identifiable generation or even a single type of highly adept technology user. For educators, the diversity revealed by these studies provides valuable insights into students' experiences of technology inside and outside formal education. While this body of work provides a preliminary understanding, it also highlights subtleties and complexities that require further investigation. It suggests, for example, that we must go beyond simple dichotomies evident in the digital natives debate to develop a more sophisticated understanding of our students' experiences of technology. Using a review of recent research findings as a starting point, this paper identifies some key issues for educational researchers, offers new ways of conceptualizing key ideas using theoretical constructs from Castells, Bourdieu and Bernstein, and makes a case for how we need to develop the debate in order to advance our understanding. [source]


The ,digital natives' debate: A critical review of the evidence

BRITISH JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY, Issue 5 2008
Sue Bennett
The idea that a new generation of students is entering the education system has excited recent attention among educators and education commentators. Termed ,digital natives' or the ,Net generation', these young people are said to have been immersed in technology all their lives, imbuing them with sophisticated technical skills and learning preferences for which traditional education is unprepared. Grand claims are being made about the nature of this generational change and about the urgent necessity for educational reform in response. A sense of impending crisis pervades this debate. However, the actual situation is far from clear. In this paper, the authors draw on the fields of education and sociology to analyse the digital natives debate. The paper presents and questions the main claims made about digital natives and analyses the nature of the debate itself. We argue that rather than being empirically and theoretically informed, the debate can be likened to an academic form of a ,moral panic'. We propose that a more measured and disinterested approach is now required to investigate ,digital natives' and their implications for education. [source]