<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="http://elearningblogs.education.ed.ac.uk/oldelgg/elgg/heywayne/weblog/rss/language/rssstyles.xsl"?>

<rss version='2.0'   xmlns:dc='http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/'>
    <channel xml:base='http://elearningblogs.education.ed.ac.uk/oldelgg/elgg/heywayne/weblog/'>
        <title><![CDATA[Wayne Barry : Weblog items tagged with language]]></title>
        <description><![CDATA[The weblog for Wayne Barry, hosted on Holyrood Park.]]></description>
        <link>http://elearningblogs.education.ed.ac.uk/oldelgg/elgg/heywayne/weblog/</link>        
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Digital Imperialism: The Tyranny of Technology]]></title>
            <link>http://elearningblogs.education.ed.ac.uk/oldelgg/elgg/heywayne/weblog/143.html</link>
            <guid isPermaLink="true">http://elearningblogs.education.ed.ac.uk/oldelgg/elgg/heywayne/weblog/143.html</guid>
            <pubDate>Thu, 29 Nov 2007 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
		<dc:subject><![CDATA[imperialism]]></dc:subject>
		<dc:subject><![CDATA[digital natives]]></dc:subject>
		<dc:subject><![CDATA[digital immigrants]]></dc:subject>
		<dc:subject><![CDATA[cyberdiversity]]></dc:subject>
		<dc:subject><![CDATA[Prensky]]></dc:subject>
		<dc:subject><![CDATA[IDELautumn07]]></dc:subject>
		<dc:subject><![CDATA[language]]></dc:subject>
		<dc:subject><![CDATA[net generation]]></dc:subject>
		<dc:subject><![CDATA[culture]]></dc:subject>
            <description><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://holyroodpark.net/heywayne/files/3/18/digital_immigrant.png"  border="1"  alt="i'm a digital immigrant - need to assimilate"  hspace="4"  vspace="4"  width="320"  height="240"  align="right" />The notion of &quot;<em>Millennials</em>&quot; (Howe &amp; Strauss, 2000), &quot;<em>digital natives</em>&quot; (Prensky, 2001), &quot;<em>net gen</em>&quot; (Oblinger, 2005), &quot;<em>technological generation</em>&quot; (Monereo, 2004)&nbsp;and Frand's (2000) ten attributes of the &quot;<em>information-age mindset</em>&quot; is of great interest to me. Why? Well, my institution was awarded, this year, with some <a href="http://www.canterbury.ac.uk/support/learning-teaching-enhancement-unit/Debut/index.asp"  target="_blank"  title="DEBUT Pathfinder Project">HEA Pathfinder&nbsp;funding</a> to equip some of our lecturers with the necessary skills sets and tools that would enable them to speak the &quot;<em>new</em>&quot; digital language of our students.</p><p>Indeed, the aforementioned authors have identified a&nbsp;set of&nbsp;<em>modus&nbsp;operandi</em> that is common with a particular group of people that were born after 1982 (give or take a year or two). This M.O., as it were, includes such activities as: multitasking; visual literacy; highly social; constantly connected; a preference to using keyboards than pens / pencils; and a preference&nbsp;to reading on the screen rather than printed text.</p><p>A number of reports (Ipsos MORI 2007, Livingstone&nbsp;&amp; Bober 2005) and commentators (Bayne &amp; Ross 2007, Owen 2004) have put out warnings that this might not be the case - the presupposed M.O. just doesn't fit. Delegates at&nbsp;this year's&nbsp;ALT-C conference were cautioned that the so-called &quot;<em>digital native</em>&quot; student may not be overly familiar with Web 2.0 technologies like blogs, wikis and podcasting.</p><p>The flip-side&nbsp;to the &quot;<em>digital native</em>&quot; is the &quot;<em>digital immigrant</em>&quot; (more on that later). Both terms have been popularised and mythologised from Prensky's (2001) original work and the basis of which have&nbsp;little or no substantive evidence or research to back-up&nbsp;his claims. McKenzie (2007) accuses Prensky of being &quot;<em>guilty of 'arcade scholarship'</em>&quot;. Unfortunately, in the process of lambasting and unpicking Prensky's ideas, theories and claims; McKenzie is also culpable of the same sense of &quot;<em>arcade scholarship</em>&quot; - which is a shame really as he does take Prensky to task.</p><p>Whilst I recognised that for many young people the Internet, mobile phones and MP3 players&nbsp;are very much a part of their everyday life and culture in the same way that television, radio and cassette players were with me in 1970s&nbsp;- so much so that it stops&nbsp;being technology and becomes normalised - it doesn't necessarily follow that all students use technology or that they appreciate the use of &quot;<em>trendy</em>&quot; technology&nbsp;as part of&nbsp;their learning experience; despite what JISC (2007) may say.</p><p>According to Prensky (2001), &quot;<em>digital immigrants</em>&quot; represent the complete antithesis of the &quot;<em>digital natives</em>&quot;. Whilst some of the more &quot;<em>smarter immigrants</em>&quot; might be able to embrace technology and begin to speak the same language as the &quot;<em>digital natives</em>&quot;, albeit with an &quot;<em>accent</em>&quot;, most are not quite as forward-looking or thinking. It is these gross assumptions and the patronising manner that makes the whole &quot;<em>digital divide</em>&quot; debate / discourse distasteful and wholly unhelpful. </p><p>The whole lexicon of &quot;<em>digital native</em>&quot;, &quot;<em>digital immigrant</em>&quot; (Prensky, 2001), &quot;<em>digital savage</em>&quot;, &quot;<em>technological migrant</em>&quot;&nbsp;(Monereo, 2004), &quot;<em>digital colonist</em>&quot; (Sandford, 2006), and &quot;<em>digital refugee</em>&quot;&nbsp;(Feeney, n.d.) is imperialistic in nature and racist by inclination (Bayne &amp; Ross, 2007). </p><p>These metaphors alludes towards cyberspace as being some kind of untamed and untapped &quot;<em>Wild West Frontier</em>&quot; with the physical apparatus of pipes, cables, fibre-optics and microwave links being&nbsp;construed as a &quot;<em>digital railroad</em>&quot;. This kind of linguistic flimflammery are neither useful nor helpful culturally, ideologically, technologically or educationally; and do very little to help us to try and understand the <strong><u>true</u></strong> digital diversity (<em>cyberdiversity?</em>) of our hetereogeneous student body. </p><p><strong>References</strong></p><p>Bayne, S. and Ross, J., (2007). The &quot;Digital Native&quot; and &quot;Digital Immigrant&quot;: A Dangerous Opposition. <em>Annual Conference of the Society for Research into Higher Education</em>. December 2007.</p><p>Feeney, L., (n.d.). Digital Denizens. <em>In: Previously In The Spotlight </em>[online]. Available at <a href="http://loki.stockton.edu/~intech/spotlight-digital-denizens.htm">http://loki.stockton.edu/~intech/spotlight-digital-denizens.htm</a>&nbsp;[Accessed 29 November 2007]</p><p>Frand, J.L., (2000). The Information-Age Mindset: Changes in Students and Implications for Higher Education. <em>Educause</em>. September/October 2000.</p><p>Howe, N. and Strauss, B., (2000). <em>Millennials Rising: The Next Great Generation</em>. New York: Vintage Books.</p><p>Ipsos MORI, (2007). Student Expectations Study: Findings from Preliminary Research.&nbsp;<em>JISC</em> [online]. Available at:&nbsp;<a href="http://www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/publications/studentexpectationsbp.aspx">http://www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/publications/studentexpectationsbp.aspx</a> [Accessed&nbsp;29 November 2007]</p><p>JISC, (2007). In Their Own Words: Exploring the learner's perspective on e-learning. <em>JISC</em> [online]. Available at:&nbsp;<a href="http://www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/publications/intheirownwords.aspx">http://www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/publications/intheirownwords.aspx</a> [Accessed 29 November 2007]</p><p>Krause, K., (2007). Who is the e-Generation and How are they faring in Higher Education? <em>In:</em> Lockard, J.&nbsp;and Pegrum, M.&nbsp;(eds) <em>Brave New Classrooms: Democratic Education and the Internet</em>. New York: Peter Lang. pp. 125-139.&nbsp;</p><p>Livingstone, S. and Bober, M., (2005). <em>UK Children Go Online</em> [online]. Available at:&nbsp;<a href="http://personal.lse.ac.uk/bober/UKCGOfinalReport.pdf">http://personal.lse.ac.uk/bober/UKCGOfinalReport.pdf</a> [Accessed 29 November 2007]&nbsp;</p><p>McKenzie, J., (2007). Digital Nativism, Digital Delusions and Digital Deprivation. <em>From Now On</em>, 17(2). [online]. Available at:&nbsp;<a href="http://fno.org/nov07/nativism.html">http://fno.org/nov07/nativism.html</a> [Accessed 29 November 2007]&nbsp;</p><p>Monereo, C., (2004). The Virtual Construction of the Mind: The Role of Educational Psychology. <em>Interactive Educational Media</em>. 9, pp. 32-47.&nbsp;</p><p>Oblinger, D., (2003). Boomers, Gen-Xers and Millenials: Understanding the New Students. <em>Educause</em>. July/August 2003.</p><p>Owen, M., (2004). The Myth of the Digital Native. <em>Futurelab</em>. June 2004. Available at: <a href="http://www.futurelab.org.uk/resources/publications_reports_articles/web_articles/Web_Article561">http://www.futurelab.org.uk/resources/publications_reports_articles/web_articles/Web_Article561</a>&nbsp;[Accessed 29 November 2007]</p><p>Prensky, M., (2001). Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants. <em>On the Horizon,</em> 9(5), NCB University Press.</p><p>Sandford, R., (2007). Digital Post-Colonialism. <em>Flux</em>. 14&nbsp;December 2006. Available at:&nbsp;<a href="http://flux.futurelab.org.uk/2006/12/14/digital-post-colonialism/">http://flux.futurelab.org.uk/2006/12/14/digital-post-colonialism/</a> [Accessed 29 November 2007]</p><p><strong>Sources</strong>&nbsp;</p><p>The photo comes from <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lynetter/"  target="_blank"  title="Lynetter">Lynetter</a>'s &quot;<em><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/lynetter/sets/72057594139269787/"  target="_blank"  title="Lynetter's Interesting Snippets">Interesting Snippets</a></em>&quot; Photo Set on Flickr.</p>]]></description>
        </item>
        
    </channel>
</rss>