TY - JOUR
T1 - Students' access to digital literacy at a South African university
T2 - Privilege and marginalisation
AU - Kajee, Leila
AU - Balfour, Robert
PY - 2011/6
Y1 - 2011/6
N2 - Lifelong learning has become associated with participation in the digital age, affecting everything from access to information technology, to its use in teaching and learning. It is therefore inevitable that educationists turn to digital literacy practices to examine their contribution to, and influence on, learning. This article explores the digital literacy practices of a group of higher education students with minimal previous access to digital resources, as well as how they compensate for uneven access, with a view to examining what they perceive to be challenges and possibilities offered by technology. Thus the article highlights how they are 'caught-between' two worlds: the technologicised and non-technologicised. The work is framed by New Literacy Studies, which suggests that literacy is a contextualised practice positioned in relation to social institutions and the power relations that sustain them (Gee, 1996). Emerging themes indicate that students perceive digital practices to have symbolic value, and provide access to cultural capital.
AB - Lifelong learning has become associated with participation in the digital age, affecting everything from access to information technology, to its use in teaching and learning. It is therefore inevitable that educationists turn to digital literacy practices to examine their contribution to, and influence on, learning. This article explores the digital literacy practices of a group of higher education students with minimal previous access to digital resources, as well as how they compensate for uneven access, with a view to examining what they perceive to be challenges and possibilities offered by technology. Thus the article highlights how they are 'caught-between' two worlds: the technologicised and non-technologicised. The work is framed by New Literacy Studies, which suggests that literacy is a contextualised practice positioned in relation to social institutions and the power relations that sustain them (Gee, 1996). Emerging themes indicate that students perceive digital practices to have symbolic value, and provide access to cultural capital.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84859297737&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2989/16073614.2011.633365
DO - 10.2989/16073614.2011.633365
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84859297737
SN - 1607-3614
VL - 29
SP - 187
EP - 196
JO - Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies
JF - Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies
IS - 2
ER -