Perceptions and Analysis of Digital Risks. Группа авторов
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Perceptions and Analysis of Digital Risks - Группа авторов страница 14

Название: Perceptions and Analysis of Digital Risks

Автор: Группа авторов

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Базы данных

Серия:

isbn: 9781119887942

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ information on digital risks (54.2%) feel that this information is insufficient. Another 52.3% say they have not been trained in digital uses in teaching situations. Among those who have received training in digital uses, opinions are very divided: half of them (50.1%) state that this training was not useful to them in dealing with the risks; the other half (49.3%) believe that the training enables them to deal with them. The majority of respondents (62.3%) say that training regarding digital risk management with students would be helpful to them. We also note that those who have not been trained are slightly more likely (70.9%) to feel this need. Even among those who have been trained, half (53%) still feel the need for training. The feeling of a need for training is clear, even among those who have already been trained. There is no denial of the need for training, nor is there any dispute about its usefulness.

      However, we can see that the more teachers feel that the risks are important for their students, the more they express the need for training. Thus, the nuance lies in the reception of the discourse on risk: while some will consider that the risks are high and require expert skills to deal with them, others will consider that the risk exists but that it remains moderate in their context and that they will be able to manage it.

      The survey of digital risk perceptions among new teachers who are beginning their careers and who are, for the most part, digital natives, reveals their importance and impact on students’ digital literacy and the use of digital tools in the classroom. For many, talk of risks has a strong emotional impact that can generate a sense of incompetence and a feeling of lack of training. As a result, these digital natives do not feel more confident or competent in dealing with the issues related to digital uses in their personal context and even more so at school. Alarmist speeches about the dangers of digital technology therefore seem to have a stronger negative impact and do not encourage teachers to engage in educating students through and on digital technology.

      Amadieu, F. and Tricot, A. (2014). Apprendre avec le numérique : mythes et réalités. Retz, Paris.

      Becchetti-Bizot, C. (2017). Repenser la forme scolaire à l’heure du numérique : vers de nouvelles manières d’apprendre et d’enseigner. Report no. 2017–056, Ministry of National Education, Youth and Sports, France.

      Beck, U. (2008). La société du risque : sur la voie d’une autre modernité. Flammarion, Paris.

      Ben Youssef, A. (2004). Les quatre dimensions de la fracture numérique. Réseaux, 127–128(5), 181–209.

      Blaya, C. (2013). Les ados dans le cyberespace : prises de risque et cyberviolence. De Boeck Superieur, Louvain-la-Neuve.

      Bronner, G. (2013). La démocratie des crédules. Presses universitaires de France, Paris.

      Cardon, D. (2015). À quoi rêvent les algorithmes : nos vies à l’heure des big data. Le Seuil, Paris.

      Citton, Y. (2014). Pour une écologie de l’attention. Le Seuil, Paris.

      Cordier, A. (2015). Imaginaire(s) de la jeunesse à l’heure du numérique : entre discours et pratiques, des imaginaires en tension. Interfaces Numériques, 4(2), 269–284.

      Desmurget, M. (2019). La fabrique du crétin digital : les dangers des écrans pour nos enfants. Le Seuil, Paris.

      Hayles, N.K. (2016). Lire et penser en milieux numériques : attention, récits, technogenèse. Université Grenoble Alpes, Saint-Martin-d’Hères.

      Liquète, V. and Le Blanc, B. (2017). Introduction générale. In Les élèves, entre cahiers et claviers, Liquète, V. and Le Blanc, B. (eds). Hermès La Revue, 2(78), 11–14.

      Merzeau, L. (2013). L’intelligence des traces. Intellectica – La revue de l’Association pour la Recherche sur les sciences de la Cognition (ARCo), 1(59), 115–135.

      Musso, P. (2008). La révolution numérique : techniques et mythologies. La Pensée, (355), 103–120.

      Pariser, E. (2011). The Filter Bubble: What the Internet is Hiding from You. Penguin, London.

      Plantard, P. (2016). Les imaginaires numériques en éducation. Manucius, Paris.

      Plantard, P. and Le Mentec, M. (2013). INEDUC : focales sur les inégalités scolaires, de loisirs et de pratiques numériques chez les adolescents. Terminal, (113–114), 79–91.

      Prensky, M. (2001). Digital natives, digital immigrants part 2: Do they really think differently? On the Horizon, 9(5), 1–6.

      Rouvroy, A. (2014). Des données sans personne : le fétichisme de la donnée à caractère personnel à l’épreuve de l’idéologie des Big Data. Étude annuelle du Conseil d’État : le numérique et les droits et libertés fondamentaux, La Documentation française, Paris.

      Stassin, B. (2019). (Cyber) harcèlement : sortir de la violence, à l’école et sur les écrans. C&F, Caen.

      Stora, M. (2018). Et si les écrans nous soignaient ? Psychanalyse des jeux vidéo et autres plaisirs numériques. Erès, Toulouse.

      1 Chapter written by Camille CAPELLE.

      2 For a color version of all the figures in this chapter, see: www.iste.co.uk/capelle/digitalrisks.zip.

      Конец СКАЧАТЬ