scholarly journals DIGITAL IMMIGRANTS’ SURVIVAL KIT

Author(s):  
Ebba Ossiannilsson ◽  
Pedro Ferreira ◽  
Alfredo Soeiro ◽  
Peter Mazohl Mazohl ◽  
Kylene De Angelis ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
2015 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
Colleen P. Kirk ◽  
Larry Chiagouris ◽  
Vishal Lala ◽  
Jennifer D. E. Thomas

2019 ◽  
pp. 1-24
Author(s):  
Ana Elisa RIBEIRO

Este trabalho, de cunho ensaístico, apresenta uma releitura crítica e uma discussão sobre o texto “Digital natives, digital immigrants”, do designer de jogos norte-americano Marc Prensky, publicado em 2001 e mencionado até os dias de hoje, no contexto da pesquisa brasileira em linguística aplicada e em educação. Considera-se relevante repensar as questões ali colocadas, quase duas décadas atrás, e principalmente discutir a noção de um “fosso digital” estabelecido entre os atores que convivem nas escolas: alunos e professores. A fim de estabelecer algum contraste teórico e mesmo epistemológico sobre como pensar as questões de educação relacionadas às tecnologias digitais, recorremos a Néstor García Canclini e à proposta também mais democrática e mais contextualizada da pesquisadora Roxane Rojo.


Author(s):  
Rosana Stan ◽  
Éva Kállay

Web technologies are changing old patterns of learning. Online learning is simultaneously a tool and a challenge in improving our learning process because working online is a fundamental competence for today's society. Rethinking needs and course design for online learning to be applied to all subjects at all levels (digital natives and digital immigrants as well) is, maybe, the biggest challenge in education. It is necessary to give teachers adequate training to teach using technologies in a way that supports specific pedagogical mode. Online learning for adult learners has both advantages and disadvantages. Research into online learning is an emerging field and all of this information has practical implication for design and tutoring online activities in the case of adult learners.


2022 ◽  
pp. 187-204
Author(s):  
María A. Pérez-Juárez ◽  
Javier M. Aguiar-Pérez ◽  
Miguel Alonso-Felipe ◽  
Javier Del-Pozo-Velázquez ◽  
Saúl Rozada-Raneros ◽  
...  

A lot of millennials have been educated in gamified schools where they played Kahoot several times per week, and where applications like Classcraft made them feel like the protagonists of a videogame in which they had to accumulate points to be able to level up. All those that were educated in a gamified environment feel it is natural and logical that gamification is used in all areas. For this reason, gamification is increasingly becoming important in different fields including financial services, bringing new challenges. Gamification allows financial institutions to provide personalized and compelling experiences. Big data and artificial intelligence techniques are called to play an essential role in the gamification of financial services. This chapter aims to explore the possibilities of using artificial intelligence and big data techniques to support gamified financial services which are essential for digital natives but also increasingly important for digital immigrants.


Author(s):  
Rosana Stan ◽  
Éva Kállay

Web technologies are changing old patterns of learning. Online learning is simultaneously a tool and a challenge in improving our learning process because working online is a fundamental competence for today's society. Rethinking needs and course design for online learning to be applied to all subjects at all levels (digital natives and digital immigrants as well) is, maybe, the biggest challenge in education. It is necessary to give teachers adequate training to teach using technologies in a way that supports specific pedagogical mode. Online learning for adult learners has both advantages and disadvantages. Research into online learning is an emerging field and all of this information has practical implication for design and tutoring online activities in the case of adult learners.


2014 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 84-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dalia Suša

AbstractBackground: The term digital natives refer to those born since the 1980s and have been growing up surrounded by technology. On the other hand, digital immigrants are born before 1980s and learned how to use technology later in life. Objectives: Goal of the paper is to explore attitudes of digital native students on the course of Business Informatics at higher educational institutions (HEIs), and to compare them with attitudes of digital immigrants. Methods/Approach: The survey was conducted in 2014 using the sample of first-year Business Informatics students from the Faculty of Economics and Business in Zagreb, Croatia. Results were compared with a research conducted in 1998. Results: In comparison to an earlier research, digital natives perceive their level of competency in the subject of Business Informatics before teaching practices much higher compared to digital immigrants. However, there is still an increase in digital native students’ level of competency in the subject before and after teaching practices. Conclusions: The research confirms a shift from digital immigrants to digital natives who show high level of interest for Business Informatics course topics and find its utility very high. However, constant improvement of delivering knowledge is needed in order to keep these high levels.


2011 ◽  
pp. 870-879
Author(s):  
Danika Rockett ◽  
Tamara Powell ◽  
Amy Massey Vessel ◽  
Kimberly Kimbell-Lopez ◽  
Carrice Cummins ◽  
...  

Someone has to prepare faculty who are in need of technology skills. For example, in Louisiana, in response to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, every faculty member at the university level has to have a Blackboard presence and a disaster plan so that classes can continue in the event of a catastrophe. Those faculty called upon to assist their peers in complying with the directives are often chosen only because they are more comfortable than others with technology. Often, trainees are uncomfortable in such training, and senior faculty, often later “digital immigrants,” can be resentful. The researchers and authors of this paper have garnered $443,658 in grants involving training faculty in instructional technology. Through their experiences, the authors and researchers have isolated seven key practices that make such training successful. This article describes those practices and supports the findings of the primary research with secondary research on andragogy and Marc Prensky’s ideas of the literacy divide that exists between “digital natives” and “digital immigrants.” By considering the basic tenets of adult education, we can be better facilitators of valuable training sessions that will bridge the digital divide.


Author(s):  
Randall McClure

This chapter explores the gap in information between digital natives and digital immigrants. Advances in computer technology have transformed information, and resulting changes in information behavior clearly mark the digital information divide. These changes in information behavior have affected information literacy instruction, yet educators have opted for quick fix strategies, ignoring the need to develop a comprehensive information literacy curriculum for the digital age. Partnerships—between primary, secondary, and postsecondary teachers and librarians and curriculum designers working to establish a vertically and horizontally scaffolded K-16 information literacy curriculum—may effectively bridge the divide.


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