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Beyond Technology: Children's Learning in the Age of Digital Culture

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ISBN: 978-0-745-63881-2

June 2007

Polity

224 pages

Description
Beyond Technology offers a challenging new analysis of learning, young people and digital media. Disputing both utopian fantasies about the transformation of education and exaggerated fears about the corruption of childhood innocence, it offers a level-headed analysis of the impact of these new media on learning, drawing on a wide range of critical research.

Buckingham argues that there is now a growing divide between the media-rich world of childrens lives outside school and their experiences of technology in the classroom. Bridging this divide, he suggests, will require more than superficial attempts to import technology into schools, or to combine education with digital entertainment. While debunking such fantasies of technological change, Buckingham also provides a constructive alternative, arguing that young people need to be equipped with a new form of digital literacy that is both critical and creative.

Beyond Technology will be essential reading for all students of the media or education, as well as for teachers and other education professionals.

About the Author
David Buckingham is Professor of Education at the Institute of Education, London University where he directs the Centre for the Study of Children, Youth and Media.
Features

  • An original and ground breaking new analysis of learning, young people and digital media
  • Brings to a broad student and professional readership the very latest research and thinking on children’s use of new media both in and outside of the classroom
  • Written by an internationally renowned scholar of media education in a very clear, accessible and straightforward manner
  • Will be required reading for a wide audience of students, scholars and education professionals
  • Sets out a provocative new argument of children’s digital literacy that is likely to provoke attention and wide debate