Young Children and Digital Literacy: ELINET Amsterdam January 2016
Young Children and Digital Literacy: ELINET Amsterdam January 2016
Young Children and Digital Literacy: ELINET Amsterdam January 2016
literacy
ELINET Amsterdam January 2016
Dr Rosie Flewitt
UCL Institute of Education, London
[email protected]
Literacy cannot be divorced from
Emergent literacy
language more broadly or from
the social contexts of its use
Literacy is given meaning by the
cultural discourses and practices
in which it is embedded
Young children are from birth
witnesses to and participants in
a wide range of increasingly
digital practices
Handheld portable technologies
(e.g. smartphones & tablets),
have led to device use becoming
ever more intimate and
personalised
Digital media and young lives
q Medical records; pre-natal scans
q Popular culture on TV, games
and merchandising
q Mobile phones (as pacifiers;
texting; talking; getting
information, games)
q In-car technologies
q Digital components in toys
q Computers & gaming devices
q Mobile, touch-sensitive devices
(iPad, iPhone etc)
q Distributed, online activities
(Club Penguin, Facebook etc)
DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES ARE
MULTIPLE, MOBILE AND q Kindles etc
UBIQUITOUS
Contemporary Literacy Practices
q At least three in four children live in a household with a tablet computer (aged
3-4 =75%); 5-15 = 81%) (Ofcom, 2015)
q 39% of 3-4 year-olds go online either at home or elsewhere (Ofcom, 2015)
q Over half (53%) of 3-4s use a tablet (vs. 39% in 2014) and 75% of 5-15s (vs.
64% in 2014) (Ofcom, 2015:6)
q Young children are playing more games on a tablet (from 21% in 2014 to 28%
for 3-4s; from 30% to 37% for 5-7s). Overall, more than half of all 8-11s
(52%) and six in ten (60%) 12-15s play games online (Ofcom, 2015:6)
q Dramatic rise in digital book reading among parents and young children, who
increasingly are reading stories using personal portable technologies, e.g.
iPads/ tablets. Some increase in usage in early education (Formby, 2014)
q Digital use is a global phenomenon e.g. in Pakistan 107.8 million mobile phone
users (total population 176.2m); around three-quarters of the world’s
inhabitants now have access to a mobile phone (WorldBank)
So what does this mean (1)?
q Learning to read ‘is one of the most complex achievements of the human
brain’ (Wyse and Goswami, 2008:706) – and it’s getting more complicated!
q While some textual practices with digital media replicate those associated with
print texts, others are associated with ‘new literacies’, patterned by distributed
relationships, multiple identities, multimodality, and online participation
(Lankshear and Knobel, 2006)
So what does this mean (2)?
q Becoming and being literate is a child’s right - it is empowering and
can promote a positive sense of self as a learner
q Children learn best when they are interested in what they are
learning, when literacy activities have a recognisable purpose with
which they identify, and where there is a degree of choice and
collaboration
Digital Literacies: a toxic childhood?
Some key concerns:
1. Physical inactivity will have adverse effects on children’s health
q How can we use digital and print media to create purposeful literacy
activities that motivate children’s engagement and reflect children’s
interests?