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Chapter 21: Digital literacy in theory, policy and practice: old concerns, new opportunities

Chapter 21: Digital literacy in theory, policy and practice: old concerns, new opportunities

pp. 266-281

Authors

, Monash University, , Queensland University of Technology
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Summary

Introduction

The increasing ubiquity and use of digital technologies across social and cultural life is a key challenge for educators engaged in helping students develop a range of literacies useful for school and beyond. Many young people’s experience of communication and participation is now shaped by almost constant engagements with digital technologies and media, as well as with global digital cultures. This increasing access and use has given many young people the opportunity to engage deeply with global media cultures via popular music, television and film franchises, the worldwide computer games industry, or countless other subcultures that connect fans and interested others from around the world via the internet. ‘Digital literacy’ is often the term associated with the ability to traverse these, and other, online and offline worlds; the notion has long been synonymous with the idea that digital technologies now mediate perhaps a majority of our social interactions. These forms of engagement with the world have important implications for educators and school systems which have historically recognised only a very narrow set of legitimate literacies.

CRITICAL QUESTIONS

  • What is the relationship between new technologies and literacy?

  • What concepts and tools can educators use to understand the role digital literacies might play in formal education and in young people’s out-of-school lives?

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