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International Perspectives on Digital Media and Early Literacy
evaluates the use and impact of digital devices for social
interaction, language acquisition, and early literacy. It explores
the role of interactive mediation as a tool for using digital media
and provides empirical examples of best practice for digital media
targeting language teaching and learning. The book brings together
a range of international contributions and discusses the increasing
trend of digitalization as an additional resource in early
childhood literacy. It provides a broad insight into current
research on the potential of digital media in inclusive settings by
integrating multiple perspectives from different scientific fields:
(psycho)linguistics, cognitive science, language didactics,
developmental psychology, technology development, and human-machine
interaction. Drawing on a large body of research, it shows that
crucial early experiences in communication and social learning are
the basis for later academic skills. The book is structured to
display children's first developmental steps in learning in
interaction with digital media and highlight various domains of
early digital media use in family, kindergarten, and primary
schools. This book will appeal to practitioners, academics,
researchers, and students with an interest in early education,
literacy education, digital education, the sociology of digital
culture and social interaction, school reform, and teacher
education.
International Perspectives on Digital Media and Early Literacy
evaluates the use and impact of digital devices for social
interaction, language acquisition, and early literacy. It explores
the role of interactive mediation as a tool for using digital media
and provides empirical examples of best practice for digital media
targeting language teaching and learning. The book brings together
a range of international contributions and discusses the increasing
trend of digitalization as an additional resource in early
childhood literacy. It provides a broad insight into current
research on the potential of digital media in inclusive settings by
integrating multiple perspectives from different scientific fields:
(psycho)linguistics, cognitive science, language didactics,
developmental psychology, technology development, and human-machine
interaction. Drawing on a large body of research, it shows that
crucial early experiences in communication and social learning are
the basis for later academic skills. The book is structured to
display children's first developmental steps in learning in
interaction with digital media and highlight various domains of
early digital media use in family, kindergarten, and primary
schools. This book will appeal to practitioners, academics,
researchers, and students with an interest in early education,
literacy education, digital education, the sociology of digital
culture and social interaction, school reform, and teacher
education.
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