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Journal ArticleDOI

Are digital natives a myth or reality? University students' use of digital technologies

TLDR
The findings show that students use a limited range of mainly established technologies, and the study did not find evidence to support popular claims that young people adopt radically different learning styles.
Abstract
This study investigated the extent and nature of university students' use of digital technologies for learning and socialising. The findings show that students use a limited range of mainly established technologies. Use of collaborative knowledge creation tools, virtual worlds, and social networking sites was low. 'Digital natives' and students of a technical discipline (Engineering) used more technology tools when compared to 'digital immigrants' and students of a non-technical discipline (Social Work). This relationship may be mediated by the finding that Engineering courses required more intensive and extensive access to technology than Social Work courses. However, the use of technology between these groups is only quantitatively rather than qualitatively different. The study did not find evidence to support popular claims that young people adopt radically different learning styles. Their attitudes to learning appear to be influenced by lecturers' teaching approaches. Students appear to conform to traditional pedagogies, albeit with minor uses of tools delivering content. The outcomes suggest that although the calls for transformations in education may be legitimate it would be misleading to ground the arguments for such change in students' shifting patterns of learning and technology use.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The digital native – myth and reality

TL;DR: A critical perspective on popular and political understandings of young people and digital technologies – characterised by notions of “digital natives”, the “net generation” and other commonsense portrayals of expert young technology users are offered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Can we teach digital natives digital literacy

TL;DR: The findings show that the undergraduates were generally able to use unfamiliar technologies easily in their learning to create useful artefacts and the self-perception measures indicated that digital natives can be taught digital literacy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Do Learners Really Know Best? Urban Legends in Education

TL;DR: The authors take a critical look at three pervasive urban legends in education about the nature of learners, learning, and teaching and look at what educational and psychological research has to say about them.
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Virtual Technologies Trends in Education

TL;DR: The huge possibilities of accessible virtual technologies will make it possible to break the boundaries of formal education as discussed by the authors, and educational institutions will benefit from better accessibility to virtual technologies; this will enable them to teach in virtual environments that are impossible to visualize in physical classrooms, like accessing into virtual laboratories, visualizing machines, industrial plants, or even medical scenarios.
Journal ArticleDOI

The myths of the digital native and the multitasker

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present scientific evidence that there is no such thing as a digital native who is information-skilled simply because (s)he has never known a world that was not digital.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mixed Methods Research: A Research Paradigm Whose Time Has Come

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors position mixed methods research (mixed research is a synonym) as the natural complement to traditional qualitative and quantitative research, and present pragmatism as offering an attractive philosophical partner for mixed method research.
Book

The research act: A theoretical introduction to sociological methods

TL;DR: The Research Act as discussed by the authors is a textbook for methods courses and a major contribution to sociological theory, which teaches students the principles of research and how to construct and test theories by presenting four major approaches to experimentation: survey research, participant observation, life histories, and symbolic interaction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants, Part II: Do They Really Think Differently?

Marc Prensky
- 01 Nov 2001 - 
TL;DR: Prensky as mentioned in this paper explored the differences between "digital natives" and "digital immigrants" and presented evidence to support these differences from neurology, social psychology and from studies done on children using games for learning.
Journal ArticleDOI

The 'digital natives' debate: a critical review of the evidence

TL;DR: It is proposed that a more measured and disinterested approach is now required to investigate ‘digital natives’ and their implications for education and it is argued that rather than being empirical and theoretically informed, the debate can be likened to an academic form of a ‘moral panic’.
Book

Educating the Net Generation

TL;DR: This reading book is your chosen book to accompany you when in your free time, in your lonely, this kind of book can help to heal the lonely and get or add the inspirations to be more inoperative.