Digital Citizenship and Digital Literacy in the Conditions of Social Crisis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Basic Considerations
2.1. Digital Citizenship
2.2. Digital Skills and Digital Literacy
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- The Elders Generation, which includes people born before 1925;
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- the Generation of Builders born between 1925 and 1946;
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- a generation of Baby Boomers born between 1946 and 1964;
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- Generation X, born between 1965 and 1979 and adapting to the digital;
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- the W generation or children of transition born between 1980 and 1994;
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- Generation Z or the Millennium Children born between 1995 and 2009;
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- Generation Alpha children born after 2010.
3. Methodology
4. Results
4.1. Focus Groups
“They definitely help because they give access to a very large database of information that can be used for different things”(female, 21 years old).
“Definitely yes, even this is a requirement for almost all better business positions”(female, 21 years old).
“Yes, for example, irregularities are filmed, posted, for example, on social networks or blogs... and this somehow influences people’s social behavior. I feel responsible to take pictures of things that are wrong and to share them with others so that there is a reaction to them”(male, 20 years old.).
“I myself am interested in the environmental topic, and receive information on social networks about various events, we have a group in which such information is shared.”(Female, 19 years old).
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- The effectiveness of ongoing digital learning;
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- the readiness of the educational system as a capacity and resources for online learning;
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- the challenges of online learning.
“The lectures follow the set time as a start and end time, the teachers enter the platforms and present the topics they have provided, then there is time to ask questions from us and ask if something is not clear”(male, 19 years old).
“For me there is no difference in what is taught, the things are the same, whether it will be in the university hall or at home in front of a laptop, there is no difference”(woman, 21 years old).
“Online learning is more effective because teachers give more materials, links to publications than in face-to-face form. Besides, you don’t waste time traveling to the university, everything is electronic and so one mobilizes more”(male, 21).
“not all teachers are equally good and do equally well with the management of the technological system”(male, 20 years old).
“it can definitely be said that young teachers are more adequate and it is easier for them to operate with digital platforms and their rules and their implementation”(female, 21 years old).
4.2. Analysis of Surveys
4.2.1. Digital Education at the Secondary School in the Conditions of COVID
4.2.2. Quantitative National Survey of Digitization in Crises
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Milenkova, V.; Lendzhova, V. Digital Citizenship and Digital Literacy in the Conditions of Social Crisis. Computers 2021, 10, 40. https://doi.org/10.3390/computers10040040
Milenkova V, Lendzhova V. Digital Citizenship and Digital Literacy in the Conditions of Social Crisis. Computers. 2021; 10(4):40. https://doi.org/10.3390/computers10040040
Chicago/Turabian StyleMilenkova, Valentina, and Vladislava Lendzhova. 2021. "Digital Citizenship and Digital Literacy in the Conditions of Social Crisis" Computers 10, no. 4: 40. https://doi.org/10.3390/computers10040040
APA StyleMilenkova, V., & Lendzhova, V. (2021). Digital Citizenship and Digital Literacy in the Conditions of Social Crisis. Computers, 10(4), 40. https://doi.org/10.3390/computers10040040