Digital skills of internet natives: Different forms of digital literacy in a random sample of northern Italian high school students

This article outlines the main results and methodological challenges of a large-scale survey on actual digital skills. A test covering three main dimensions of digital literacy (theoretical, operational and evaluation skills) was administered to a random sample of 65 third-year high school classes,...

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Veröffentlicht in:New media & society 2011-09, Vol.13 (6), p.963-980
Hauptverfasser: Gui, Marco, Argentin, Gianluca
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description This article outlines the main results and methodological challenges of a large-scale survey on actual digital skills. A test covering three main dimensions of digital literacy (theoretical, operational and evaluation skills) was administered to a random sample of 65 third-year high school classes, producing data on 980 students. Items include knowledge questions, situation-based questions and tasks to be performed online. A Rasch-type model was used to score the results. In agreement with the literature, the sample performed better in operational skills, while showing a particularly poor performance regarding evaluation skills (although for this dimension the test shows reliability issues). Through a robust regression analysis we investigate if a skills divide based on ascriptive differences, gender and family cultural background, exists among the students. It emerges that cultural background has a significant effect, which is stronger on operational skills, while gender shows a more definite impact on theoretical knowledge.
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source SAGE Complete; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Cultural influence
Digital divide
Family
Gender
High School Students
Inequality
Information and communication technologies
Internet
Italy
Knowledge
Literacy
Methodological Problems
Sex
Sex Differences
Skill differentials
Skills
Students
Youth
title Digital skills of internet natives: Different forms of digital literacy in a random sample of northern Italian high school students
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