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Title: | Entering e-Society: Young Children's Development of e-Literacies, 2005 |
Keywords: | CHILDREN COMPUTER LITERACY INTERNET USE CHAT ROOMS INTERNET ACCESS PRESCHOOL CHILDREN PRE-PRIMARY EDUCATION GENDER HOUSEHOLDS MOBILE PHONES DIGITAL TELEVISION PARENT PARTICIPATION CAMERAS FRIENDS LIBRARIES WEBSITES INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY INFORMATION SOCIETY EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND ECONOMIC ACTIVITY HOUSEHOLD INCOME 2005 Scotland |
Description: | <P>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</P> Today's preschool children are growing up in an 'e-society', where digital connectivity to the internet, mobile phones and other forms of electronic interaction is an essential feature of daily life. To maximise the benefits that digital connectivity offers, avoid disadvantage or marginalisation, and become confident, discriminating and effective members of e-society, children need to become competent users of these new technologies. Despite increasing attention to the ways in which school-aged children learn to exploit them, there has been little research so far into the early experiences of preschool children (aged three to five), or the implications for subsequent educational development.<br> <br> The study of children's entry into e-society aims to address this gap by investigating children's development of early 'e-literacy' in the home. For this project, the concept 'e-literacy' was defined as a set of technical and socio-cultural competences needed to make effective and creative use of digital connectivity opportunities. Use of the term 'e-literacy' implies parallels with print literacy and one of the features of this study was a comparison between young children's developing e-literacy and their early print literacy, about which there is a well-established body of research. The impact of socio-economic disadvantage on the early development of e-literacy was also examined, an aspect of the 'digital divide' which has hitherto received limited attention. <br> <br> This research addressed three interrelated themes: the nature of children's experiences as they enter e-society; factors supporting or hindering the development of early e-literacy; and the emergence of a digital divide between children with extensive and varied experiences of digital connectivity at home and in the community, and those who have not had such opportunities. The role of the survey was to contextualise the case-study data on which the project is principally based. <br> <br> Further information on the project may be found on the University of Stirling Institute of Education's <a href="http://www.ioe.stir.ac.uk/research/projects/esociety/index.php" title="Entering e-Society: Young Children's Development of e-Literacies">Entering e-Society: Young Children's Development of e-Literacies</a> project web page.<br> <br> <B>Main Topics</B>:<BR> The data cover children's access to information technology such as mobile phones, methods of internet access, email, web cameras (webcams), interactive television, independent and supervised use of these technologies, parents' use of the same technologies, and demographic characteristics of the household.<br> |
URI: | https://t2-4.bsc.es/jspui/handle/123456789/64319 |
Other Identifiers: | 10.5255/UKDA-SN-5698-1 5698 http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-5698-1 |
Appears in Collections: | Cessda |
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