Skip to main content

Digital natives vs. digital fluency

I think digital natives are a real thing, but all digital natives are not fluent. The term native reminds me of the process that babies use to acquire language.  A person is said to be a native speaker when they grow up surrounded by the language that is "native" to them. They grow up hearing their parents use the language and that's how they develop their proficiency. Some kids grow up with an amazing vocabulary and some students enter school at a deficit.

Digital literacy is the same. Some students grow up in households where they are surrounded by laptops, phones, reliable internet and online tools that are being used consistently and effectively. But some kids grow up in a house where they don't have those things, or where they don't see these tools put to effective use. Those students are, by definition, digital natives. But are they digitally fluent? Nope. Just because you know how to scroll through TikTok or Instagram, doesn't mean you can navigate online effectively.

As educators we need to focus on a students digital fluency rather than focus on when they were born. That means nothing. Every year I have a least one student who doesn't realize that you can hit shift to make a letter capital. They don't know how to save a file, much less share it with me. They have 200 documents that start with C because they don't understand that when you make a copy of something in google drive, you should change the name so that doesn't happen. Or, they make 4 copies of the same document because they can't find it. Schools should focus on making students digitally fluent. We need to teach the skills that help students use online tools effectively. 

Comments

  1. I very much agree with your thoughts here! Just like it is important to consider and assess the content knowledge students may have coming in to a class, it is equally important to consider and assess the technological knowledge students may have coming in to a class where technological use is expected. Teachers absolutely cannot assume that students are either fluent or not fluent in technology based off of a characteristic like age!

    ReplyDelete
  2. So very interesting! I love your example of language. My first language is Spanish, but am I proficient in it? Ehh I wouldn't say so, but someone who know how to speak Spanish, but isn't native, would say yes! You made great points about focusing on digital fluency. I have students who have been surrounded by internet their entire lives. They don't understand how email works. It's pretty crazy.

    ReplyDelete
  3. This is a great point, Tired Teacher. This reminds me of the Affordable Connectivity Program that recently got initiated, to offer low-cost and discounted internet services to the greater population and places of remote connectivity. About 20 internet service providers are offering better prices for lower income population... this seems quite late in the world of internet... however, better than never!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree, better late than never. Affordable internet is not longer a luxury, it is a necessity. My school provides every student with a device, but if you can't use it outside of the classroom, then it is of very little use.

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Think Big!!!

  Full transparency I thought this produsage assignment would be a piece of cake. After all this is what I do. I have written thousands of lesson plans over the past 27 years. What actually happened, I got a really good wake up call about how teaching and instructional design are not the same. Let me explain. Good teachers think small. They write lessons that are tailor made for the students who are sitting in front of them that year (or class period). The idea of knowing your kids and creating an assignment that is tailor made for them is the goal. The ideal.  When I started the produsage assignment I approached it from this direction. What will the sixth graders that I have in my class this year be able to do? What do I want to accomplish with them? What I have come to realize that instructional designers think BIG ! It's not about what you need for just a few kids who you see everyday. Instructional designers create lessons on a much larger scale. The lessons you create nee...

I might be crazy!!

So I did something a little crazy and decided to get a summer job working with little ones. As most of you know I am a middle school math teacher. My summer job of choice working with 6, 7 and 8 year olds. I want to stop here and give a shout out to all the lower elementary school teachers out there. I will take teenage angst over little tears any day. I don't know how you do it!   What is my reasoning? I wanted to try something new? I wanted to see how the other half lives? I am secretly a glutton for punishment? Not really sure, but they did offer me some insight into this whole digital native argument.  Let me start by saying that the number of littles who have a device of their own is mind boggling to me. I remember forcing my kids to wait until late middle or high school to have their own device. Most of the students in my camp group have a device that is web enabled. By definition these kids are digital natives, but I have noticed a few things. 1. They don't ta...

Thing That Make You Go HMMM!!

  Okay so I admit I lost it this week! If you read my previous blog, you know what I'm talking about, if you didn't you should check it out (warning there is cursing and stupidity involved). It's a good read. Really Okay so I have been watching the news to see what other counties are going to do. Mostly I have been watching to see what OCPS is going to do. I want to see if I am going to have to run screaming from the building because I have gone completely mad. But anyway, no word on OCPS but I really like what two counties have decided to do.  The premise of this whole idea of parental rights in school involves parents wanting to control what their student learns. If I am being honest, that doesn't really bother me. I think parents should be involved. My issue is when the will of the few gets imposed on the many. That isn't fair. Two counties in Florida have found a creative way to stop this from happening. Polk county has six books that have been challenged. Paren...