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Journal ArticleDOI

Are ‘digital natives’ really digitally competent?—A study on Chinese teenagers

TLDR
The study concluded by highlighting the role of education in improving teenagers’ digital competence and by recommending the development of well-designed teaching and learning materials for the Chinese K-12 school system.
Abstract
Literature review has found that despite the considerable attention focused on ‘digital natives’, few studies have carefully investigated the characteristics of this group. The purpose of this study is to contribute to the debate on digital natives by providing a ‘piece of evidence’ on the digital competence status of a group of Chinese teenagers (ninth grade students) randomly selected from the Jiangdong District in Ningbo City, Zhejiang Province. An Instant Digital Competence Assessment (iDCA) tool, developed by a research group from the University of Florence, was adopted as the measurement tool for the study. Quantitative research was employed and the research design for the study was descriptive in nature. Data analysis results found that the majority of the participating ninth grade students (n = 317) had personal computers (PCs) and the Internet available at home and the average period of time owing a PC was about 5 years. The iDCA results indicated that (1) participants’ overall performance in the iDCA was just ‘pass’ rather than ‘good’ or ‘excellent’, which might imply that digital natives in China are not necessarily digitally competent; (2) there were big disparities among participants as regards their digital competence; (3) participants’ digital competence differed depending on their schools and their ages; (4) participants’ digital competence was not significantly influenced by such factors as having a PC or not, having the Internet or not at home, frequency of computers and Internet use. On the basis of the findings, the study concluded by highlighting the role of education in improving teenagers’ digital competence and by recommending the development of well-designed teaching and learning materials for the Chinese K-12 school system.

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Citations
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The net generation and digital natives: implications for higher education

Chris Jones, +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that there is no clear demand from students for changes to pedagogy at university (e.g. demands for team and group working) and there is little evidence that students enter university with demands for new technologies that teachers and universities cannot meet.
Journal ArticleDOI

Are young generations in secondary school digitally competent? A study on Italian teenagers

TL;DR: The authors conclude that the optimistic portrayal of younger generations' digital competences is poorly founded and it is pointed out that understanding students' digital competence levels through fast assessment tools is a fundamental opportunity for schools to analyse deficiencies and prepare adequate intervention strategies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Digital Natives and Digital Immigrants

TL;DR: The paper suggests that there is a continuum rather than a rigid dichotomy between digital natives and digital immigrants, and this continuum is best conceptualized as digital fluency, which is the ability to reformulate knowledge and produce information to express oneself creatively and appropriately in a digital environment.
Journal Article

Meeting the "Digital Natives": Understanding the Acceptance of Technology in Classrooms

TL;DR: The differences between teachers and students with regard to technology lie in how they utilize technology and how important they perceived it to be, which may help to understand new millennium learners and provide them proper classroom technology products.
References
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Book

Educational research, an introduction

TL;DR: A systematic review of research methods and techniques used in qualitative and quantitative education, and some of the approaches taken, found that qualitative research is more effective than quantitative research on a number of fronts.
Journal Article

Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants

Marc Prensky
- 01 Oct 2001 - 
TL;DR: For example, this paper pointed out that students are no longer the people our educational system was designed to teach, and that a really big discontinuity has taken place in the last decades of the 20th century.
Journal ArticleDOI

Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants Part 1

Marc Prensky
- 01 Sep 2001 - 
TL;DR: Part one of this paper highlights how students today think and process information fundamentally differently from their predecessors, as a result of being surrounded by new technology.
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.