In this article, I deal with the transition from traditional ‘school’ forms of instruction to educational processes that are fully mediated by digital technologies. Against the background of the idea the very institution ‘school’ is closely linked to the invention of the alphabetic writing system and to the need of initiating new generations into a literate culture, I focus on the issue of literacy training. I argue that with the digitization of education, a fundamental transition takes place regarding what it means to be literate, but also what it means to educate and to be educated. I do so by developing a ‘techno-somatic’ approach, which means that I look at the use of concrete instructional technologies, and the bodily disciplines that ...
This paper explores the purchase and usefulness of the notion of digital literacy. Comparing and con...
Digital literacy is increasingly being identified as a formal educational goal. While mainstream def...
In this article Joris Vlieghe defends the view that technologies of reading and writing are more tha...
In this article, I deal with the transition from traditional ‘school’ forms of instruction to educat...
In this article, I deal with the transition from traditional ‘school’ forms of instruction to educat...
This article discusses, from a theoretical and philosophical perspective, the meaning and the import...
This article discusses, from a theoretical and philosophical perspective, the meaning and the import...
Global technological advancement is changing information dissemination among literates and non-liter...
PublishedThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Sage via the DO...
In this article I deal with the impact of digitization on education by revisiting the ideas Neil Pos...
The ever-changing development of digital technology has become a scapegoat that exacerbates literacy...
This paper analyses the concept of digital literacies, focusing on recent changes in the concept of ...
In this article, we examine the historical emergence of the concept of “digital literacy” in educati...
«Digital literacy» is increasingly being identified as a formal educational goal. While mainstream d...
In the mid-1990s, we asked a question that has likely been asked in one way or another by educators ...
This paper explores the purchase and usefulness of the notion of digital literacy. Comparing and con...
Digital literacy is increasingly being identified as a formal educational goal. While mainstream def...
In this article Joris Vlieghe defends the view that technologies of reading and writing are more tha...
In this article, I deal with the transition from traditional ‘school’ forms of instruction to educat...
In this article, I deal with the transition from traditional ‘school’ forms of instruction to educat...
This article discusses, from a theoretical and philosophical perspective, the meaning and the import...
This article discusses, from a theoretical and philosophical perspective, the meaning and the import...
Global technological advancement is changing information dissemination among literates and non-liter...
PublishedThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Sage via the DO...
In this article I deal with the impact of digitization on education by revisiting the ideas Neil Pos...
The ever-changing development of digital technology has become a scapegoat that exacerbates literacy...
This paper analyses the concept of digital literacies, focusing on recent changes in the concept of ...
In this article, we examine the historical emergence of the concept of “digital literacy” in educati...
«Digital literacy» is increasingly being identified as a formal educational goal. While mainstream d...
In the mid-1990s, we asked a question that has likely been asked in one way or another by educators ...
This paper explores the purchase and usefulness of the notion of digital literacy. Comparing and con...
Digital literacy is increasingly being identified as a formal educational goal. While mainstream def...
In this article Joris Vlieghe defends the view that technologies of reading and writing are more tha...