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Are digital natives a myth or reality? University students' use of digital technologies

Are digital natives a myth or reality? University students' use of digital technologies
Are digital natives a myth or reality? University students' use of digital technologies

This study investigated the extent and nature of university students' use of digital technologies for learning and socialising. The findings show that students use a limited range of mainly established technologies. Use of collaborative knowledge creation tools, virtual worlds, and social networking sites was low. 'Digital natives' and students of a technical discipline (Engineering) used more technology tools when compared to 'digital immigrants' and students of a non-technical discipline (Social Work). This relationship may be mediated by the finding that Engineering courses required more intensive and extensive access to technology than Social Work courses. However, the use of technology between these groups is only quantitatively rather than qualitatively different. The study did not find evidence to support popular claims that young people adopt radically different learning styles. Their attitudes to learning appear to be influenced by lecturers' teaching approaches. Students appear to conform to traditional pedagogies, albeit with minor uses of tools delivering content. The outcomes suggest that although the calls for transformations in education may be legitimate it would be misleading to ground the arguments for such change in students' shifting patterns of learning and technology use.

Media in education, Pedagogical issues, Post-secondary education, Teaching/learning strategies
0360-1315
429-440
Margaryan, Anoush
16dae8ce-b68f-492c-9da7-98d488a42103
Littlejohn, Allison
a6b3dd77-b239-4461-8ffe-aabf64e840b1
Vojt, Gabrielle
20a2722e-e8b5-49e9-9f9f-01cf4e1b1387
Margaryan, Anoush
16dae8ce-b68f-492c-9da7-98d488a42103
Littlejohn, Allison
a6b3dd77-b239-4461-8ffe-aabf64e840b1
Vojt, Gabrielle
20a2722e-e8b5-49e9-9f9f-01cf4e1b1387

Margaryan, Anoush, Littlejohn, Allison and Vojt, Gabrielle (2011) Are digital natives a myth or reality? University students' use of digital technologies. Computers and Education, 56 (2), 429-440. (doi:10.1016/j.compedu.2010.09.004).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This study investigated the extent and nature of university students' use of digital technologies for learning and socialising. The findings show that students use a limited range of mainly established technologies. Use of collaborative knowledge creation tools, virtual worlds, and social networking sites was low. 'Digital natives' and students of a technical discipline (Engineering) used more technology tools when compared to 'digital immigrants' and students of a non-technical discipline (Social Work). This relationship may be mediated by the finding that Engineering courses required more intensive and extensive access to technology than Social Work courses. However, the use of technology between these groups is only quantitatively rather than qualitatively different. The study did not find evidence to support popular claims that young people adopt radically different learning styles. Their attitudes to learning appear to be influenced by lecturers' teaching approaches. Students appear to conform to traditional pedagogies, albeit with minor uses of tools delivering content. The outcomes suggest that although the calls for transformations in education may be legitimate it would be misleading to ground the arguments for such change in students' shifting patterns of learning and technology use.

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More information

Published date: 1 February 2011
Keywords: Media in education, Pedagogical issues, Post-secondary education, Teaching/learning strategies

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502380
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502380
ISSN: 0360-1315
PURE UUID: d8582706-6a04-4620-8dfd-5b3ea56d2411
ORCID for Gabrielle Vojt: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9135-0684

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Date deposited: 24 Jun 2025 16:43
Last modified: 25 Jun 2025 02:14

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Contributors

Author: Anoush Margaryan
Author: Allison Littlejohn
Author: Gabrielle Vojt ORCID iD

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