Understanding Digital Technologies and Young Children An international perspective
Coordonnateurs : Garvis Susanne, Lemon Narelle
Understanding Digital Technologies and Young Children explores the possibilities digital technology brings to enhance the learning and developmental needs of young children.
Globally, the role of technology is an increasingly important part of everyday life. In many early childhood education frameworks and curricula around the world, there is an expectation that children are developing skills to become effective communicators and are using digital technology to investigate their ideas and represent their thinking. This means that educators throughout the world are expected to actively enhance children?s learning in ways that provide learning experiences with technology that are balanced and purposeful to allow the transformation of traditional authentic learning experiences. Digital technologies can be used to explore, manipulate, discover, play and interact with real and imaginative worlds to allow active meaning making.
With a wide range of expert contributors, this book provides a comprehensive examination of the current research on technology and young children and the importance of engagement for learning. This approach encourages the reader to rethink the possibilities and potential of digital technologies for learning in the early years, especially in the years before formal schooling when children might be attending early childhood settings.
This will be a valuable reference for anyone looking for an international perspective on digital technology and young children, and is particularly aimed at current and future teachers.
1. Composing an email: Social interaction in a preschool classroom2. Technology and Literacy in the Early Years: framing young children’s meaning-making with new technologies 3. Digital technology and young children’s narratives 4. Young children’s internet cognition5. Young children photographing their learning to share their lived experiences of the learning environment 6. Shared Curiosity, Technology and Mathematics: Exploring Transitions Between Two and Three Dimensions7. "I think it should be a little kind of exciting": A technology-mediated story-making activity in early childhood education8. Multimodal meaning-making for young children: Partnerships through blogging9. Availability and use of personal computers in German kindergartens – preconditions and influences 10. iPlay, iLearn, iGrow: Tablet technologies, curriculum, pedagogies and learning in the 21st century11. The tablet computer as a mediational means in a preschool art activity12. Beginning the conversations about young children's engagement with technology in contemporary times
Susanne Garvis is a Professor of child and youth studies at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden.
Narelle Lemon is a Senior Lecturer at La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia.
Date de parution : 08-2015
17.4x24.6 cm
Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 14 jours).
Prix indicatif 160,25 €
Ajouter au panierDate de parution : 09-2015
17.4x24.6 cm
Thème d’Understanding Digital Technologies and Young Children :
Mots-clés :
Young Man; Norwegian Social Science Data Services; early years; Touch Screen Mobile Devices; early childhood education; Final Focus Group Interviews; digital technologies; Initial Focus Group Interviews; multi-modal learning; NMC Horizon; digital literacy; Young Children's Early Experiences; children; Contemporary Society; Narelle Lemon; Play Based Learning Activities; Susan Danby; Digital Narratives; Christina Davidson; Touch Screen Technologies; Lisa M; Given; Positive Learning Dispositions; Karen Thorpe; Oral Telling; Cathy Burnett; Early Literacy Provision; Karen Daniels; Van Hiele; Susan Edwards; Playgroup Facilitators; Helen Skouteris; Internet Cognition; Andrea Nolan; Swedish Preschool; Michael Henderson; Digital Personal Communication; Geir Olaf Pettersen; Digital Image Makers; Monica Volden; Children's Early Learning Experiences; Elin Eriksen Ødegaard; Ewa Skantz Åberg; ICT Competence; Annika Lantz-Andersson; Digital Literacies; Niklas Pramling; Mediate Meaning Making; Binder Marni J; Reesa Sorin; Jason Nolan; Sarah Chu; Martina Endepohls-Ulpe; Claudia Quaiser-Pohl; Christine Deckers; Nicola Yelland; Malin Nilsen; Mona Lundin; Cecilia Wallerstedt; Karen McLean