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Source: InCites
Abstract
children digital media ecology learning
Children use digital media for a range of different reasons, including communication, play and learning. For some children, learning with digital media might involve structured activities, but for others, learning might occur using digital media as part of everyday life. This paper presents a study investigating parents' perspectives of how their children learn with technologies in home environments and how children's digital media ecologies are constructed by parents, children and other actors. Three families located in Australian cities with children between the ages of 4–8 years were included in the study (4 adults and 3 children).We present insights from the families about the tensions of digital media use in the home, what constitutes ‘learning’ for those families and how the digital media ecologies are developed. We analysed a series of vignettes to detail children's digital media ecologies, drawing on a socio material approach to de-centre children and acknowledge the multiplicity of ways digital media ecologies impact learning and media balance.
Details
Title
Parent Perspectives of Digital Media for Learning at Home
Creators
Amanda Levido - Southern Cross University
Sarah Matthews - Queensland University of Technology
Philippa Amery - Queensland University of Technology
Emma Cross - Curtin University
Publication Details
Children & Society, Vol.First online, pp.1-10
Publisher
National Children's Bureau and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Grant note
This research was supported by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the Digital Child through project number CE200100022.