31,528 research outputs found
UPTAKE ICT: A NETWORK OF STAKEHOLDERS AGAINST DIGITAL ILLITERACY
#Uptake_ICT2life-cycle: digital literacy and inclusion to learners with disadvantaged background# is
an Erasmus + project that aims at enhancing digital literacy among adults with disadvantaged
backgrounds. The partners have produced didactic materials and pedagogical guidelines to meet this
aim. Based on these materials, and their didactical exploitation, a network of stakeholders was formed
and trained in order to subsequently be able to teach citizens that both have disadvantaged
backgrounds and are digitally illiterate or quasi-illiterate. This paper relates how this experience was
undertaken in Portugal in what concerns the creation of the Stakeholders' network and presents its
results. The reality that has boosted the creation of this project was the shocking situation portrayed in
2013 Eurostat statistics, according to which one in every three Portuguese had never used the
Internet. Uptake ICT was then conceived and designed in order to engage synergies to counter this
problem, aiming at a variety of focus groups (but paying special attention to learners of various ages
that have never used Internet, like adults with disadvantaged backgrounds), in line with the transversal
priorities for education, training and youth of the European Commission and seeking to assist in the
meeting of the aims of Europe 2020. To add up, it also intended to enhance and to develop ideas that
answer to the Societal Challenges’ needs, by sharing and creating scientific, social, technological and
policies impact.
The main aspects that the project focused on were digital literacy inclusion, re-qualification and
employability of disadvantaged citizens, in order to help them to face the present process of
civilizational change (social, political, economic, and cultural). The addressed priorities were to
contribute towards a reduction of the number of low-skilled adults (re-skilling and up-skilling of adults
thanks to lifelong-learning and training), and to strengthen the links between education and
employment in the area of ICT | New technologies | digital literacy and digital competences | basic
skills. After having identified both the most preeminent needs and ways of integrating ICT in daily life,
and a set of good practices already tested in the areas of digital literacy, inclusion and employability,
the project team has built a number of educational contents addressing the issues that were
considered most relevant in three main levels of knowledge (Basic, Intermediate, and advanced) , and
in the four languages of the project (Portuguese, Italian, English and German). The decision to work
on the three levels was due to the fact that in the various partner countries there were groups of target
audiences that were positioned differently with respect to their level of digital expertise. The teachinglearning
materials that were conceived were afterwards reworked in order to fit in a variety of contexts
and formats (e-modules, ebook, MOOC). This option for multi-format was taken having in mind
different learning profiles, and the need to provide flexible and attractive materials in order to avoid
any kind of rejection. Finally, a number of didactical guidelines were produced in order to provide an
interface of suggestions to the stakeholders that would use these materials in their classes or
workshop sessions.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Digital Opportunity Initiative for Pakistan
“People lack many things: jobs, shelter, food, health care and drinkable water. Today, being cut off from basic telecommunications services is a hardship almost as acute as these other deprivations, and may indeed reduce the chances of finding remedies to them”. By these remarks at Telecom 99 in Geneva, Switzerland, UN Secretary General Kofi Anan warned of the danger of excluding the world’s poor from the information revolution. Although the world has seen exponential progress in terms of artificial intelligence, biotechnology, genetic engineering, neural networks, neurolinguistic programming, information technology management, telematics and infonomics, trade liberalisation, space exploration—but on ground the very pace and velocity of knowledge-driven growth has left a giant crevice between the information haves and the information have-nots, giving birth to a nomenclature called—the Digital Divide. Today information has become the most vibrant force and factor of production in the new economy contrary to the four traditional factors of production. Information has become the most important source of economic activity and the link which drives the info-hungry entrepreneurs to utilise the four factors of production in the optimal manner. Not land, not labour, not capital has done for an entrepreneur which the information alone has done. The world has seen a paradigm shift from scarce economic resources to the Age of Abundance—where plenty of information is available!
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Is there language teaching after global English?
This study documents a case of language education decline, and the role that distance-teaching expertise, allied with Information and Communication Technology (ICT) experience, can play in alleviating the problem. In the United Kingdom a number of factors have led to a crisis in the teaching and learning of European Languages Other Than English (ELOTE). One of the main determiners is the dominance of English as a lingua franca for Continental Western European countries, and another the political reluctance of the part of British governments to engage fully with the European Union. In the country where English is the mother tongue, the position of ELOTE is particularly critical. After quantifying the decline in demand for these languages, I will look at different ways in which language-teaching professionals have attempted to fight back, and I will focus on the benefits that may be derived from a strategy that combines ICT capacity with distance-learning methodologies, using the UK Open University (UKOU) as an example. The lessons drawn by that institution in different discipline areas over two decades will be applied to languages
The perks and downsides of being a digital prosumer: optimistic and pessimistic approaches to digital prosumption
The recent evolution of users’ position and agency in digital environments absorbs the attention of several scholars in different fields of study. Users’ new ontological status as prosumers, simultaneously producers and consumers, and their role regarding productive paradigms has raised a lot of contrasting opinions. Different discursive techniques are employed to investigate production practices in digital worlds and are often crafted with the conventions of utopian and anti-utopian approaches. Nevertheless, the adoption of optimistic or pessimistic analytical and rhetorical strategies appears to be prejudiced towards the study of emerging online practices. In reality, the analysis of positive and negative approaches to productive paradigms in digital environments results in the detection of their limitations in reaching a comprehensive understanding of the investigated phenomena. Therefore, the adoption of a more neutral perspective is suggested, one that could potentially foster a holistic approach and therefore a broader and deeper comprehension of the analyzed phenomena
La formación de docentes en TIC: aportaciones desde diferentes modelos de formación
Training the teaching staff in Information and Communication Technologies comes implicitly with the study of its different dimensions and principles, regarding the indications that have been pointed from a variety of studies and works. In our current society, it is clear that the significance of ICT to improve quality and educational performance is not exclusively determined by its presence, but also by the variety of transformations that involves not only using them as a way of consuming knowledge but also seeing them as tools to enrich, create and generate said knowledge. From this perspective, investment in professional development is more important than investment in resources associated with technology. ftis is an important aspect for incorporation of ITC, not considering only its use to do better things than we do without it, but to do things in a complete different manner. We present this article which describes a tour of some of the bases and models, analyzing the problematic of training in digital skills that teachers might face when they incorporate them into their teaching and professional practice.Hablar de la formación del profesorado en Tecnologías de la Información y la Comunicación, implica el estudio de diferentes dimensiones y principios, contemplando las indicaciones que han apuntado distintos estudios y trabajos. En la sociedad actual, es claro que la significación de las TIC para mejorar la calidad y el rendimiento educativo, no viene exclusivamente determinado por su presencia, sino también por diferentes transformaciones que implican pasar de utilizarlas únicamente como una forma de consumir conocimientos, a verlas como herramientas para enriquecerlos, crearlos y generarlos. Desde esta perspectiva, la inversión en desarrollo profesional es más importante que la inversión en recursos asociados a la tecnología, siendo unaspecto importantepara su incorporación, el noplantearse únicamente su utilización para hacer mejor las cosas que hacemos sin ellas, sino para hacer cosas completamente distintas. Desde esta óptica, planteamos el presente artículo en el que se describe un recorrido por algunas de las bases y modelos, analizando la problemática de la formación en las competencias digitales que debe poseer el profesorado a la hora de incorporarlas en su práctica docente y profesional
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