In this post originally published by the CILIP Information Literacy Group, Gianfranco Polizzi, research fellow at the University of Birmingham, writes about digital and data literacy, focussing on children’s understanding of online privacy compared with experts and advocates and on what policymakers, schools and educators can do to educate children through formal education
At a time so many everyday activities have gone online, parents are confronting the need to balance ...
Personal mobile devices are central to the current digital age, and will soon be pervasive and ubiqu...
It’s estimated that by age 13, online ad companies have collected over 72 million pieces of informat...
Childhood records, once kept safe in paper files and family memory books, now exist as records in th...
How do parents and carers approach bringing up their children in the digital age? Drawing on researc...
In responding to the UK government’s recent consultation on “Data: a new direction,” LSE’s Professor...
Children and young people have long been expected to develop digital skills and knowledge relevant t...
The COVID-19 pandemic has shifted in-class, face-to-face learning to remote learning. But the conseq...
Based on searches in Academic Search Premier, ERIC, SCOPUS and ORIA the paper reviews a total of 55 ...
We live in a platform society. What we do online is immediately shared within a lucrative global dat...
Society has high hopes and considerable fears for the digital future. On the one hand, parents are t...
Current research into data use suggests that the intersection of assessment, reform, and public acco...
Digital technologies are often praised for having special relevance for children with disabilities, ...
There is a growing trend in early childhood education towards using commercial software to record le...
This essay describes and reflects on the integration of computational research skills into core (tha...
At a time so many everyday activities have gone online, parents are confronting the need to balance ...
Personal mobile devices are central to the current digital age, and will soon be pervasive and ubiqu...
It’s estimated that by age 13, online ad companies have collected over 72 million pieces of informat...
Childhood records, once kept safe in paper files and family memory books, now exist as records in th...
How do parents and carers approach bringing up their children in the digital age? Drawing on researc...
In responding to the UK government’s recent consultation on “Data: a new direction,” LSE’s Professor...
Children and young people have long been expected to develop digital skills and knowledge relevant t...
The COVID-19 pandemic has shifted in-class, face-to-face learning to remote learning. But the conseq...
Based on searches in Academic Search Premier, ERIC, SCOPUS and ORIA the paper reviews a total of 55 ...
We live in a platform society. What we do online is immediately shared within a lucrative global dat...
Society has high hopes and considerable fears for the digital future. On the one hand, parents are t...
Current research into data use suggests that the intersection of assessment, reform, and public acco...
Digital technologies are often praised for having special relevance for children with disabilities, ...
There is a growing trend in early childhood education towards using commercial software to record le...
This essay describes and reflects on the integration of computational research skills into core (tha...
At a time so many everyday activities have gone online, parents are confronting the need to balance ...
Personal mobile devices are central to the current digital age, and will soon be pervasive and ubiqu...
It’s estimated that by age 13, online ad companies have collected over 72 million pieces of informat...