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Cyberkids - Youth Identities and Communities in an On-line World (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,348
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Cyberkids - Youth Identities and Communities in an On-line World (Paperback)
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In this important volume, the authors tackle some of the most
pressing issues relating to children and computer usage. While
parents endorse the benefits for academic attainment and employment
prospects, fears include the risk of corruption, the loss of
imaginative opportunities for play and social withdrawal. Are we
creating a generation of 'Mouse Potatoes'? The findings on which
the book is based are the result of a two-year government-funded
study of children's use of computers at school and in the home.
They are disturbingly at odds with popular and policy
understandings of the technology. Holloway and Valentine found that
computer use in the classroom tended to be governed by peer
pressure, with boys and girls bringing gendered attitudes to the
keyboard. The boys' interest in cars, football, programming and the
search for porn was seen as part of their bonding process. The
girls on the other hand were less interested in the technical
aspects and games and more concerned with communication, using the
chat pages and sending emails. The study also looked at life around
the screen in the family home. Where the computer was located in
the bedroom, it appeared to be part of a developing bedroom culture
linked to concerns about children withdrawing spatially and the
decline of the family. But having the computer in a shared space
meant that it acted as a popular gathering point for all family
members. The 'Electronic Sodom' that so many parents worry will
leave their children vulnerable to paedophiles and neo-Nazi groups
failed to materialise. The authors found no undue risk, with many
children appearing to be a lot more knowledgeable and competent at
arranging their own lives than they were given credit for. The
detailed list of findings will be surprising to both parents and
teachers. Overall the study suggests there is little evidence that
the government's IT policy is working given the uneven patterns of
provision between schools and the varied management strategies of
schools themselves. And since adults and schools present computer
usage through an adult lens they may be unwittingly discouraging
rather than stimulating their use. Many popular fears are
unfounded. Children aren't spending excessive time indoors and
computers don't encourage a breakdown in family relations. Well
structured and backed by theoretical debate, this book is essential
reading for all those in the teaching profession and will be an eye
opener for parents. (Kirkus UK)
As Tony Blair has argued "Technology has revolutionised the way we work and is now set to transform education. Children cannot be effective in tomorrow's world if they are trained in yesterday's skills." Cyberkids draws together research in the sociology of childhood and social studies of technology to explore children's experiences in the Information Age. The book addresses key policy debates about social inclusion and exclusion, children's identities and friendships in on-line and off-line worlds and their relationships with families and teachers. It counters contemporary moral panics about children's risk from dangerous strangers on-line, about corruption and lost innocence from adult-centred material on the web and about the addiction to life on the screen. Instead, by showing how children use ICT in balanced and sophisticated ways, the book draws out the importance of everyday uses of technology and the ways in which children's local experiences are embedded within, and in part, constitute the global.
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