teaching digital skills to digital natives?

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Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012 Teaching digital skills to digital natives? The role of teachers’ daily practises and attitudes towards new media Gianluca Argentin, University of Milano-Bicocca Marco Gui , University of Milano-Bicocca

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Teaching digital skills to digital natives? The role of teachers’ daily practises and attitudes towards new media Gianluca Argentin, University of Milano-Bicocca Marco Gui , University of Milano-Bicocca. Theoretical context. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

Teaching digital skills

to digital natives?

The role of teachers’ daily practises and attitudes towards new media  

Gianluca Argentin, University of Milano-BicoccaMarco Gui , University of Milano-Bicocca

Page 2: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

Theoretical context

• From a «digital divide» (focus on “access”) to a «digital inequality» (focus on how the web is used)(Di Maggio et al. 2004; van Dijk, 2005; Bentivegna, 2009)

• Great importance of digital skills – one of the 8 key competences for EU “for social and cultural inclusion” (European Parliament, 2006; Van Dijk, 2005; Hargittai, 2008)

Page 3: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

Students and digital skills

• «Digital natives» (Prensky, 2001) or «Digital na(t)ives »? Poor information skills among students(Livingstone & Helsper, 2007; Van Deursen &Van Dijk, 2009, Hargittai, 2010; Gui e Argentin, 2011, Calvani et al., 2011)

• Little attention on digital skills development (especially in its critical dimension) in Italian schools (all efforts and resources seem to go to the tecnical dimension)(IPRASE, 2009; IARD, 2010)

Page 4: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

Our (unanswerable) research question

Is there an impact of teachers’ digital practices/attitudes

on their students’ digital skills?

Page 5: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

Our (answerable) research question

Is there a robust association betweenteachers’ digital practices/attitudes

and their students’ digital skills?

Page 6: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

Our starting point

Data from a survey carried out by the authors (Argentin, Gui & Tamanini, in press) showed a a statistically significant and substantially relevant relationship between teachers’ practices concerning ICT and the level of digital competence of their students, also when controlling for a wide set of students/schools variables (standardized correlation: 0.25, p value < 0.05).

However, a small sample size (n=980) and the local nature of the survey (Trentino) constitute important limitations.

Page 7: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

Larger area and two very different regional contexts: Trentino (mountainous) and Lombardy (metropolitan)

 

Plus of present study /1

L T

LT

Page 8: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

Bigger sample: 3.439 students (10th grade) in 181 classes (63 in Trentino and 118 in Lombardy)

More in-depht questionnaire about teachers’ behaviours and attitudes

Additional control variables at school and student level, to further test the robustness of previous association

A new standardized test, measuring in particular the level of “critical digital skills” or “information skills”

(on which students are most in need of school support according to existing evidence) 

Plus of present study /2

Page 9: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

Dependent variable

Improved version of the previous tool (Gui & Argentin, 2011,

cited by Hargittai e Hsieh, 2012; Hsieh, 2012).

32 items testing students’ ability to recognize different sources of information on the internet, assess their reliability,

understand possible information biases and risks.

The test has been validated and provided a reliable measures (Cronbach alpha 0.70)

of digital skills on a standardized scale.

Page 10: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

Independent variableIndex derived from the questionnaire, summarizing nine items

“Do your teachers…? • help to judge the reliability of information on the Internet;• advise how to avoid viruses;• talk about the risks in online social networks;• help to set privacy limitations on your social network accounts;• talk about useful websites for school-related issues;• talk about useful websites for leisure ;• talk about the existence of groups of people that collaborate on the Internet;• use the Internet with you”. Answers: “More than one/One/None”

To reduce the risk of students misreporting, we consider the answer given by the majority (at least 60%) of students within each class.

Page 11: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

OLS regression models taking into account the data class clusterization.

4 nested models: - mod0 is a null model;- mod1 controls for region and type of school track; - mod2 controls also for socio-demographic variables (sex, parental social class/education, nationality);- mod3 controls also for technological context: home and school ICT equipment, parental perceived digital skills; students’ previous school performance.

Methods

Page 12: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

ResultsEstimated association between teachers practices/attitudes

and their pupils digital skills

Page 13: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

Were previous results about Trentino entirely wrong?

Page 14: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

Results/2Estimated association between teachers practices/attitudes

and their pupils digital skills by region

Page 15: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

If you prefer:Estimated interaction between region and teachers

practices/attitudes on their pupils digital skills

Page 16: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

A brand new research question

Why did we find a robust and positive association in Trentino (twice) and a

null association in Lombardy?

Page 17: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

Possible explanations• Different teacher practices: is the index hiding relevant differences on

single items?• More access in L.: more technologically equipped households and

constantly available wireless in Lombardy.• More practice in L.: constant use of ICT, thanks to more frequent access

and promoting context.• More skilled parents in L.: the (slightly) higher level of (perceived)

parental digital skills could promote intra-family development of digital competence.

• Richer ICT school equipment in T.: a setting promoting the development of digital skills (for example, 56% with an Interactive Whiteboard versus 28% in L.).

Page 18: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

Preliminary conclusions1. The association previously observed in Trentino between

students’ skills and teachers behavior concerning ICTs resists to further controls

2. BUT: no correlation found in Lombardy

We tested several hypothesis to explain the observed difference among contexts, but none has been empirically validated.

Unanswered question: What are the characteristics that make Trentino (and not Lombardy) an effective context for teaching digital skills to digital natives through informal daily teachers’ behaviour?

Page 19: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

Further steps

• Look for additional control variables (i. e. subsample of schools located in mountainous areas in Lombardy)

• Rash validation of both measures (dependent and independent variables)

• Use teachers declaration instead of students’ reports (unluckily only for Lombardy)

Page 20: Teaching digital skills  to digital natives?

Teaching digital skills to “digital natives” Rome, October 4th 2012

Do your teachers

More then one One None Total

help to judge the reliability of information on the Internet 11 24 65 100 advise how to avoid viruses 3 17 80 100 talk about the risks in online social networks 9 20 71 100 help to set privacy limitations on your social network accounts 3 10 87 100 talk about useful websites for school-related issues 20 35 45 100 talk about useful websites for leisure 6 15 79 100 talk about the existence of groups of people that collaborate on the Internet 3 11 86 100 use the Internet with you 13 25 62 100