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Amount Of Time Teens Spend Online Can Improve Digital Literacy

Teen Digital Literacy

The Huffington Post   Emmeline Zhao First Posted: 06/29/11 02:49 PM ET Updated: 08/29/11 06:12 AM ET

Don't disconnect your kids: teenagers who spend time on the web are more digitally literate during a time when technological proficiency is increasingly important, a recent report suggests.

Between 2000 and 2009, the number of students who reported having access to Internet at home nearly doubled -- to 89 percent from 45 percent, according to the Digital Technologies and Performance report published by the Programme for International Student Assessment. PISA is an assessment conducted by the Paris-based Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development on 15-year-old students across OECD countries. The group defines reading literacy as:

"Understanding, using, reflecting on and engaging with written texts in order to achieve one's goals, develop one's knowledge and potential, and participate in society. This definition applies to both print and digital reading."

Although the surveyed students are considered "digital natives," or those born in the digital age, all 16 surveyed countries had significant numbers of low-performing students in digital literacy. While more than 17 percent of students in Korea, New Zealand and Australia reached the highest level of digital reading performance, more than 25 percent of those in Chile, Austria, Hungary and Poland performed at the lowest level -- Colombia's proportion of low-performing students reached almost 70 percent.

This isn't to say that these students are incapable of navigating the web. Many of these students can locate basic pieces of information and browse web pages if given specific instructions. But they are performing at lower levels than will allow them to fully utilize the educational, employment and social opportunities available to them in a modern context.

The advent of information and communication technology has led to weighted emphasis on online reading, which researchers believe that the features of digital text require specific text-processing skills related to access, comprehension and evaluation. Even when guidance on page navigation is specific, PISA results show that digital natives still struggle in a digital environment to find crucial pages and do not know how to operate effectively. The report notes:

"This finding represents both a warning and an opportunity. It is a warning to advanced economies that they cannot take for granted that they will forever have "human capital" superior to that in other parts of the world. At a time of intensified global competition, they will need to work hard to maintain a knowledge and skill base that keeps up with changing demands."

Although North America was not represented in the survey, the GDP of countries that did participate in PISA 2009 represents 87 percent of the 2007 world GDP.

This report comes at a time when federal agents are teaching children about cyber security, and when states are prohibiting the use of social media sites in classrooms.

Other PISA findings show that participating in certain activities like emailing and chatting online influence digital reading performance. Across the surveyed countries, performance in digital proficiency is bell-shaped over time for home-users -- those who use the computer to email and chat online, both for leisure and schoolwork while at home, tend to perform better than rare and intensive users. In school, however, students perform more negatively with more intensive computer use, suggesting that students are developing digital reading literacy largely through computer use at home.

PISA administers an assessment every three years. The 2012 survey will focus on reading. Countries and territories that participated in PISA 2009 are Australia, Austria, Belgium, Chile, Denmark, France, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Japan, Korea, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Spain, Sweden, Colombia, Hong Kong-China and Macao-China.

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Don't disconnect your kids: teenagers who spend time on the web are more digitally literate during a time when technological proficiency is increasingly important, a recent report suggests. Between...
Don't disconnect your kids: teenagers who spend time on the web are more digitally literate during a time when technological proficiency is increasingly important, a recent report suggests. Between...
 
 
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05:56 PM on 07/02/2011
DUH! In a related study...kids who spend all day gaming are better at HALO
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Aaron Calhoun
What are you DOING to improve things?
02:04 AM on 07/01/2011
This article should be filed under "Gee, really?!"

I mean, c'mon.....the headline may as well have read:

"Kids Who Spend More Time Doing Something Become Better At It"

This piece could've been written any number of ways.....but to take up all that space stating the obvious is just silly.
04:42 PM on 06/30/2011
More teachers should use technology to teach students since their students are digital natives and like technology. Just want to share my LiveBinder at http://livebinders.com/edit?id=85314.It has resources and ideas to help teachers to integrate technology in their teaching.
12:32 PM on 06/30/2011
In other news, people who play soccer a lot are better at soccer.
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Steve Nelson
09:00 AM on 06/30/2011
May I suggest that "digital literacy" is largely oxymoronic?
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Aaron Calhoun
What are you DOING to improve things?
02:12 AM on 07/01/2011
I might suggest that, while your attempt at sardonic humor is well-taken, words often have more than one meaning, and the meaning of the word "literacy" utilized in this article is "competence or knowledge in a specified area". :)
07:41 PM on 06/29/2011
Well, I'll be dammed! You're kidding!
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hypnotoad72
Real democracy = living wages.
06:34 PM on 06/29/2011
Only as literate to the material they're actually working on.  Kinda reminds me of the TV show "The Prisoner", episode "The General", where the same question - with one word altered - turns a 'genius' into a 'fool'... Maybe it really is all about rote after all, and not critical thinking, but in this society, any form of thought is usually denounced. 

Besides, I doubt that there's a high demand for anybody with advanced skills in "Spore" or "Farmville", I'm afraid.  Yes, there are lots of virtual trinkets, but no real life value.  Or 'real life' as we've made it to be, but knowing anything about 'Spore' or "Farmville' ultimately only helps the makers of those games.
03:07 PM on 06/29/2011
E-mailing nasty messages to each other on Facebok is digital literacy?
02:47 PM on 06/29/2011
This is what kids will now do for attention these days-

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iqZnCfE8UzU
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hypnotoad72
Real democracy = living wages.
06:35 PM on 06/29/2011
Pseudo-aerobics.  Cool.  Seems silly to watch it, though...
mikiao
Empty my micro-bio is.
02:41 PM on 06/29/2011
In other news...Kids that ride horses daily are better horse riders than kids that don't.
07:20 PM on 06/29/2011
You don't say! :)
07:55 PM on 06/29/2011
lololol....Ok good. I thought perhaps it was me being a little too cynical. The sad thing is, they probably spent thousands of dollars conducting this "research."
mikiao
Empty my micro-bio is.
10:24 PM on 06/29/2011
They had planned on doing really in depth research about technology and kids. When the first check arrived they got all new supplies; pens, paper, laptops etc. The second check comes, they poll some kids. The third, they celebrate their poll by having lunch...the fourth comes and hey, this research stuff is easy, lets go to a movie! The fifth gets them some video games...the sixth more food...and so on.

Then they get a phone call 6months down the road, "so...how's that technology and children research going? We (the money suppliers) are waiting to hear some results."

Panic ensues, they start screaming "they're gonna kill us!" One guy jumps out a 5th story window to escape. And then one has an idea...

And that children, was how this article was born!
02:36 PM on 06/29/2011
Speaking as a "digital immigrant" and as an educator, I am hopeful that as technology develops our students will become more like a digital renaissance man and less of a digital caveman with new toys.
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HockeyMom
I was here before SP and will be long after her.
02:01 PM on 06/29/2011
Duh!