{"title":"A Brief Review of Young Children’s Home Digital Literacy Practices","authors":"Yina Liu","doi":"10.29173/AAR120","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"COVID-19 has created significant changes in the everyday lives of teachers, children and parents. Due to school lockdowns in the spring semester of 2020, teachers shifted from in-person classroom teaching into “emergent remote teaching” (Hodges et al. 2020, para. 5), where digital tools and software were used for instruction and teacher-student communications. Many children have also shifted their social lives from face-to-face to virtual interactions (Hutchins 2020); for example, engaging in online family story reading, social media participation, and joining after school activities digitally. This pandemic has highlighted the importance of being literate in digital environments for children. Digital literacy, that is, literacy practices undertaken across multi-media, involving “accessing, using and analysing digital texts and artefacts in addition to their production and dissemination” (Sefton-Green et al. 2016, p. 15). The importance of the digital world and digital tools for the post-COVID future where digital literacy could become more prominently featured for teachers, children, and parents must not be underemphasized. \n \nIn this presentation, I reviewed the literature on young children’s digital literacy practices at home. Many studies have illustrated the benefits and various kinds of learning that children get from their digital play at home, including emergent literacy learning (Neumann 2016), digital citizenship (Bennett et al. 2016), etc. Moreover, I presented the complex trajectories of children playing with their digital devices and toys at home (Marsh 2017). In the 21st century children’s home play, the boundaries between the virtual and physical worlds are blurring (Marsh 2010; O’Mara and Laidlaw 2011; Carrington 2017). \n \nMore importantly, this literature review suggests a gap and an opportunity for future researchers to explore home digital literacy of children, who are from minority backgrounds in Canada, as literacy practices are socially and culturally situated. This presentation illustrates the importance of my proposed doctoral research, as my research aims to explore Culturally and Linguistically Diverse (CLD) children’s digital home literacy practices in Canada.","PeriodicalId":239812,"journal":{"name":"Alberta Academic Review","volume":"61 3 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-07-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Alberta Academic Review","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.29173/AAR120","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
COVID-19 has created significant changes in the everyday lives of teachers, children and parents. Due to school lockdowns in the spring semester of 2020, teachers shifted from in-person classroom teaching into “emergent remote teaching” (Hodges et al. 2020, para. 5), where digital tools and software were used for instruction and teacher-student communications. Many children have also shifted their social lives from face-to-face to virtual interactions (Hutchins 2020); for example, engaging in online family story reading, social media participation, and joining after school activities digitally. This pandemic has highlighted the importance of being literate in digital environments for children. Digital literacy, that is, literacy practices undertaken across multi-media, involving “accessing, using and analysing digital texts and artefacts in addition to their production and dissemination” (Sefton-Green et al. 2016, p. 15). The importance of the digital world and digital tools for the post-COVID future where digital literacy could become more prominently featured for teachers, children, and parents must not be underemphasized.
In this presentation, I reviewed the literature on young children’s digital literacy practices at home. Many studies have illustrated the benefits and various kinds of learning that children get from their digital play at home, including emergent literacy learning (Neumann 2016), digital citizenship (Bennett et al. 2016), etc. Moreover, I presented the complex trajectories of children playing with their digital devices and toys at home (Marsh 2017). In the 21st century children’s home play, the boundaries between the virtual and physical worlds are blurring (Marsh 2010; O’Mara and Laidlaw 2011; Carrington 2017).
More importantly, this literature review suggests a gap and an opportunity for future researchers to explore home digital literacy of children, who are from minority backgrounds in Canada, as literacy practices are socially and culturally situated. This presentation illustrates the importance of my proposed doctoral research, as my research aims to explore Culturally and Linguistically Diverse (CLD) children’s digital home literacy practices in Canada.
2019冠状病毒病给教师、儿童和家长的日常生活带来了重大变化。由于2020年春季学期学校封锁,教师从面对面的课堂教学转向“紧急远程教学”(Hodges et al. 2020,第18段)。5)使用数字工具和软件进行教学和师生交流。许多孩子也将他们的社交生活从面对面转向了虚拟互动(Hutchins 2020);例如,参与在线家庭故事阅读,社交媒体参与,以及参加数字课外活动。这场大流行凸显了儿童在数字环境中识字的重要性。数字素养,即跨多媒体开展的素养实践,包括“获取、使用和分析数字文本和人工制品,以及它们的生产和传播”(Sefton-Green等人,2016年,第15页)。数字世界和数字工具对于后covid时代的未来的重要性不容忽视,在这个时代,教师、儿童和家长的数字素养将更加突出。在这次演讲中,我回顾了有关幼儿在家进行数字素养实践的文献。许多研究已经说明了孩子们从家里的数字游戏中获得的好处和各种学习,包括新兴识字学习(Neumann 2016),数字公民(Bennett et al. 2016)等。此外,我还介绍了儿童在家中玩数字设备和玩具的复杂轨迹(Marsh 2017)。在21世纪的儿童家庭游戏中,虚拟世界和现实世界之间的界限正在变得模糊(Marsh 2010;O 'Mara and Laidlaw 2011;卡灵顿2017)。更重要的是,这篇文献综述为未来的研究人员探索来自加拿大少数民族背景的儿童的家庭数字素养提供了一个差距和机会,因为识字实践是社会和文化背景。这个演示说明了我提出的博士研究的重要性,因为我的研究旨在探索加拿大文化和语言多样性(CLD)儿童的数字家庭扫盲实践。