Monday, 14 December 2009
Friday, 27 March 2009
Week 9 tasks
A, the oldest digital native I know is possibly my Dad. He has always been in and around new technologies and has grown up with the changing times and the changing machines. Each time he has mastered them and is now fluent in almost all forms of current technology. As I have said in earlier blogs a native could be defined by our curiosity to learn about new technologies, not necessarily how we have grown up in and around them. In this case my Granddad has shown lots of curiosity and is attempting to learn how to use his laptop so surely this makes him somewhat a digital native?
B, The youngest digital immigrant would technically have to be someone who has just been born. As technically, a native is someone who has grown up with technology or shows an interest in technology. A newborn baby has done none of these, so is still technically an immigrant. They will eventually after a few years become a digital native as they grow into the digital world around them.
C, I think the education system could be the biggest threat to the digital native/immigrant theory. If the educators do not realise that digital natives are learning in different ways to what that of immigrants are then the whole digital native community could fall. If the education system does not gather speed and conform to the way that children and teenagers learn, digital nativism could change, or at least slow down. This could create huge drawbacks for the future of our economy. We have now established ourselves as a technological culture and if the education system does not establish itself as one also, we could end up at a stand still, and allow other countries to leap ahead of us in technologic terms. This could be a catastrophe for us as a nation, as it could lead to things such as alliances not being formed with other countries because of the inability to protect ourselves from digital warfare and other things almost as extreme as these. The digital natives of this day and age are vital to the future of this country as they will be the ones pushing the boundaries and making things possible for the next generations.
Week 9 blog
Should education stretch a person? This is a tough question, but to answer it should be relatively simple. The answer is in short: Yes. Any form of education should stretch and expand ones mind to allow for new ideas to embed themselves into our brains. Education allows people to know things they didn’t know before, therefore stretching how far their knowledge can reach. It obligates people to elongate their horizons and realise new ideas. Education should make people think and reach the boundaries of what that person is capable of, and then go beyond them. Education should not be easy, it should be a challenge, and it should stretch what is actually possible. Everyone is still learning, and everyone is being stretched to his or her limits everyday in the cause of learning something new.
Personal preference in education provides many potential problems for people. For example, if children were left to their personal preferences at an early age, most kids would just want to do P.E, Metalwork or cooking classes rather than learn the basics of English, Maths and Science. If it were left down to kids then the education system would be in tatters with millions of children coming out of school illiterate because they have not been taught how to read because they didn’t want to learn. That is why the education system is like it is today, with all the bases covered to provide the broadest base of knowledge to springboard children into doing well in later life.
Another way in which personal preference and culture could cause potential problems for people in the field of education is that of language. Some peoples’ preference is to learn in a foreign language. This may hamper their chances of being successful in this country later on in life. It is very difficult to get a job if you do not speak the native language. It is also difficult to be taught in a foreign language, as the teacher will have to be multi-lingual to him/herself be able to get on in life also. This creates more and more problems, so personal preference may have to be sacrificed in order to get on better in later life.
The semantic web is an extension of what we currently use as the World Wide Web. It is a form of information sharing that is understandable by computers as well as humans. It will eventually speed up things like search engines and make them more user friendly. By allowing the computer to understand the input and information it will be able to perform the more boring tasks like transferring, sorting, and sharing much of this information allowing the user to do more enjoyable things.
Web 3.0 is a ‘back ended’ upgrade to the basic Internet service that is in place now. Its attempts are to combine user friendliness and smart technology in one complete package. It is suggested that web 3.0 will be able to recognise natural sentences and process them as a whole, rather than constructing its own meanings out of key words within that sentence. It will be able to read millions of texts at once and process which ones will be most relevant to you. This will possibly be the downfall of things such as Google, which relies on its key word platform to give out answers based on the words you enter.
Week 8 blog
Digital Immigration is based on two key elements. These are digital natives and digital immigrants.
Digital natives are those of us who have grown up in the digital world; those of us lucky enough to have access to the Internet, or ‘Sky’ television. It is a world of free reign and random intrusion, much like hypertext. For example, we can pick which channel we want to pick out of the 900 or so available to us on ‘Sky’, not flick through every single one until we find something we like. I say ‘we’ as I am included in this very system. We are now natives in our digital surroundings, with each of us knowing how to use a mobile phone, or a laptop.
This is in stark contrast to digital immigrants, who are those who have not been born into a digital age, but have in later life, adopted it to be their own. These have however become a very powerful agent for propriety on the Internet. Dubbed as ‘the silver surfers’ they have become one of the leading forces in many markets across the Internet. For example, Amazon.com, relies on its ‘silver surfers’ to gain as much money as it does. It is safe to assume that most digital immigrants are of the older generation and will therefore be in safe jobs with a steady income, therefore able to spend disposable cash on things they may like such as CD’s. The idea of buying CD’s to a digital native could be seen as quite old hat. [Not to me, I can’t get enough of the buggers! Probably the reason I have no money!] But to many of my native friends have never bought a CD and have downloaded every song they own, or got it from me! So in a question to who cares about digital immigration, most major companies have now accommodated for this market.
Websites that involve digital immigration:
This is part of an academic piece by Prensky. It shows how in the education field the idea of digital immigration can be used to influence and educate students on terms that they understand more. It says a lot about computer games and how these are very influential in terms of education. It raises the debate of whether digital immigrants adopt native ways in education. He rationalises that it will be beneficial to the native student to be taught in such a way that they will understand, for example in the medium of a game or graphic.
http://www.mrstacey.org.uk/teaching/?p=157
This also focuses on a teaching point of view. It however denounces the idea of digital natives and immigrants being solely dependant on age. He states that the amount of technology and our curiosity towards this technology more shows if we are digital natives or immigrants. If we strive to learn new things about a technology then we are more likely to be digital natives than immigrants.
http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/digitalnatives/
This focuses solely on digital natives. It gives a scenario of a girl scout in America, using the Internet to sell cookies to the local public. This has however been banned as it goes against the traditional methods of door- to- door sales. This however links to the 1st websites argument. This girls’ digital native ways are being forced out by the older digital immigrant girl-guide leaders. If a girl guide is savvy enough to employ the Internet as a tool for sales, then this should be applauded. It shows good entrepreneurship and good skills for thinking outside of the box, which are good things in terms of development in young girls.
This article investigates the new idea of ‘flash mobs’, made possible through the Internet. They imply that this is helped by the digital natives all being online and talking about it to their other native friends. It gains popularity and following through all the natives mooting. This allows natives to show off their skills with technology. Firstly by finding out about it by surfing the web, then telling everyone about it through an online medium such as a blog or facebook. Then, when they are there, it is up to their Ipods’ or portable music devices to give them the audio stimulus to start dancing, whilst filming the whole event on a mobile phone or video camera. 4 or 5 different technologies for just one event: a digital natives dream.
http://borndigitalbook.com/about.php
This is a blurb from a book written all about digital natives called ‘Born Digital, Understanding the first generation of digital natives’. It states that the society will change due to technology and the use of it to digital natives. It claims that even things such as family life will be different in the future because of the influx in our lives. They claim that digital immigrants see natives as very narrow-minded in their view of certain things. This could be quite a narrow-minded assumption in turn. It is impossible to say what everyone is like, and especially about digital natives who could be seen to be the most broad-minded thinkers in the technological field. These are the future of our world and have been gifted the opportunity to shape what the future will be like. So if narrow-mindedness is a feature of digital natives, then we are all in for a rocky road in the not too distant future.
Week 7 blog
In China an innovative method of education is used. This is through television. It was introduced in the 60’s, as there were many parts of the country that couldn’t get to a school. This introduced new methods of learning to a nation that was in desperate need of education. After the ‘cultural revolution’ in 1976 in China there was a great need for education at a University standard to keep the country moving forward and to bring it up to a par and then further than that of Western cultures. This need was paired together with the system of education that had been in place before that. The television. This brought about the ‘Central Radio and Television University of Beijing’. This was the first university in the world that focussed solely on the education of its students via the medium of radio and television. It allowed people who could not reach a university to gain the education they might not have got if it were not available and gave more people the opportunity to prove their worth to the well oiled Chinese machine.
Zambia University also offered a similar service. They gave students the opportunity to study from distance. It was modelled on the Australian methods, whereby students learnt via radio. However, from research I found that the broadcasts were only made in English and French, so if you did not speak either of these languages you weren’t in the best shape to learn from them. This however got much resistance from traditionalists, who claimed that it wasn’t beneficial and did not deserve a place in their curriculum. However from a study conducted on the Australian method, which is what Zambian methods were based on remember, this form of long distance learning was shown to be more intense.
Another interesting University I have found that provides long distance learning via the Internet is the University of Massachusetts, in the United States of America. This University, as of last year, offers e-learning facilities to China. Last year, there were officially only 68 universities in the whole of China that offered online services. UMass [uni of Massachusetts] has become one of these, and has been up and running for a few months now. This is quite an interesting development, as a non-Chinese source can now feed information to pupils from China. It could say something about how the online learning systems in China actually are still, even though it is forcing itself to be one of the most technologically gifted nations in the world.
Week 2 blog
One website that uses interactivity as its main source of information input is www.koptalk.com. This is a totally interactive site that allows for people who are signed up to express opinions and to share their views with other people about Liverpool Football Club. This is usually in the form of posts in threads that follow on from each other. There are various roles people play on this site. The creator of the site, ‘Dunk’, creates most of the threads for people to comment on. He is in charge of the site and mediates what is allowed to be said. The rest of us just post our thoughts and look for people to comment back. We try to engage in lots of conversations about many different things. There are certain people who have major links with the club who can give us, the fans, certain inside information around transfers, finances or player habits for example.
There is also a new form of interactivity on this site. It is called a ‘shout box’. This is available for all members to interact in a more colloquial chat situation.
This interactivity with the website allows us to change the direction or face of the site with our input. It allows us to see what we want to see and read what we want to read. This is what in Lister’s book is called ‘registrational interactivity’. Whereby a certain amount of personal detail has to be included before the opportunity for interactivity can occur. This is very typical of bulletin boards, which is essentially what koptalk is.
Hypertext is very much a part of this website. There are links everywhere to different sites and to access different parts of the very same site. For example in a normal thread, anyone can post a link to an outside website, or even embed a video into the thread. This normally happens the day after match days, where the goals [if any] are posted online in the form of a video.
This use of hypertext is used everywhere on the Internet. As ‘surfers’ of the net now, we have come to know that websites are not linear. They do not read like a book, but more like a multi channel domain. You can pick and choose which link you want to click on and, Internet providing, you will get there. You do not need to go through 30 odd pages before you get to something you like.
There are also adverts seeping into almost every site on the net now. These are also a form of hypertext, as you can then go onto those particular sites and branch out on a tangent from the original source.
Friday, 27 February 2009
CofP's... come again?
Analysis of a website

Friday, 20 February 2009
week 5 tasks part deux
Week 5 tasks
Monday, 26 January 2009
Task 1- email parts a+b
Lister... apparently a very knowledgeable man. Apparently not that knowledgeable because he has spoilt my day by me having to read his work. Not a very knowledgeable thing to do. But anyway, we'll put that aside for another day and crack on with this.
Part A:
According to Lister, email is a 'computer- mediated communication'. It is a form of communication that is competely dependant on the computer, and the internet that allows it to flow accross wires as thin as a human hair for thousands of miles in a fraction of a second. Its uses allow for one person to connect with another in an almost instant conversation. It has allowed businesses to function more smoothly and family members to stay in contact, no matter where they are on earth. There are obviously some limitations to this form. For example, you have to have a computer to start off with. You also have to have an internet connection. These are things now found in most homes, but there is still areas of the globe without connection to this.
The old media of letter writing has been replaced by this new technologic phenomenon. The actual writing of it is still there but instead of the hand written facet of it, it has now been replaced by typing, the putting it in an envelope has been reduced to the pages of time, the writing the address has been replaced by typing not the address of where the person lives but an alternate address, a new shiny address in cyberspace. A personal haven in the vast information highway that is the internet. A little piece that they call home. The going to the post box, getting a stamp, and posting it has been replaced with the simple push of a button.
Part B:
On a personal note, I use emails to send larger documents, such as photos or hyperlinks to other websites to family members and friends. I very rarely use it for people other than them.