Recent advances in broadband and mobile phone access have resulted in increased use of information, communicaiton and entertainment technologies by Indigenous Australians in remote regions of Australia. Twenty-three Indigenous adolescents (mean age 16.4 years) residing in remote regions of Western Australia participated in individual structured interviews which queried age of first use and current frequency of use of television, computers, the internet, video games and moble phones. A cloze deletion procedure was also individually administered to measure reading comprehension. Although age of first use of devices evidenced considerable variability, there were no significant relationships to reading comprehension. However, as frequency of cu...
Although in the Western world illiteracy hasn’t been a major problem for a long time, there are stil...
Indigenous people around the world are becoming more and more interested in ICT. The aural and graph...
This paper examines the evolution of 15-year-old students’ use of information and communication tech...
Twenty-four Indigenous adolescents (mean age 16.4 years) attending a boarding school in a remote reg...
The uptake of small screen technology by adolescents is widespread, particularly in industrial natio...
Indigenous youth in remote regions of Australia are disadvantaged in school and in life. While the r...
The adoption and use of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) offers new ways to improve th...
©, Published with license by Taylor & Francis. © Leonie Rutherford, Andrew Singleton, Leonee Ariel...
The paper presents a comparative study of mobile technology adoption and use by two communities - on...
The pace of technological advancement and growth in the twenty-first century continues to soar at un...
This paper collates recent research on mobile phone use in Indigenous communities in Australia. Its ...
Regular recreational book reading is a practice that confers substantial educative benefit. However,...
Aboriginal Australians have often been characterized as low users of modern Information and Communic...
Information and communications technologies (ICT) are seen as crucial in improving educational oppor...
The paper presents a comparative study of mobile technology adoption\ud and use by two communities –...
Although in the Western world illiteracy hasn’t been a major problem for a long time, there are stil...
Indigenous people around the world are becoming more and more interested in ICT. The aural and graph...
This paper examines the evolution of 15-year-old students’ use of information and communication tech...
Twenty-four Indigenous adolescents (mean age 16.4 years) attending a boarding school in a remote reg...
The uptake of small screen technology by adolescents is widespread, particularly in industrial natio...
Indigenous youth in remote regions of Australia are disadvantaged in school and in life. While the r...
The adoption and use of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) offers new ways to improve th...
©, Published with license by Taylor & Francis. © Leonie Rutherford, Andrew Singleton, Leonee Ariel...
The paper presents a comparative study of mobile technology adoption and use by two communities - on...
The pace of technological advancement and growth in the twenty-first century continues to soar at un...
This paper collates recent research on mobile phone use in Indigenous communities in Australia. Its ...
Regular recreational book reading is a practice that confers substantial educative benefit. However,...
Aboriginal Australians have often been characterized as low users of modern Information and Communic...
Information and communications technologies (ICT) are seen as crucial in improving educational oppor...
The paper presents a comparative study of mobile technology adoption\ud and use by two communities –...
Although in the Western world illiteracy hasn’t been a major problem for a long time, there are stil...
Indigenous people around the world are becoming more and more interested in ICT. The aural and graph...
This paper examines the evolution of 15-year-old students’ use of information and communication tech...