TY - JOUR
T1 - Measuring digital literacies
T2 - Junior high-school students’ perceived competencies versus actual performance
AU - Porat, Erez
AU - Blau, Ina
AU - Barak, Azy
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2018/11
Y1 - 2018/11
N2 - The widespread belief is that youth, “digital natives” who live their entire lives in media-rich digital environments and are ubiquitously connected through social networks, naturally develop digital competencies. This study investigated digital literacies among 280 junior-high-school students with the aim of comparing participants’ perceived digital literacy competencies and their actual performance in relevant digital tasks. The findings showed that only a few of participants’ perceived skills were related to their actual performance. Generally, participants displayed high confidence in their digital literacies and significantly over-estimated their actual competencies. This gap was most evident in social-emotional skills, which were, on average, perceived by students as their strongest skills, while their actual level of performance was very low. Positive strong correlations were found between participants’ self-reported evaluations of different digital skills, indicating their perception as a single factor, while actual performance tests revealed low-to medium-size correlations between different literacies. For educational decision-makers, the findings highlight the importance of designing training programs aimed to develop students’ digital literacies, with a special emphasis on social-emotional competencies. Such training may enhance important competencies needed, reduce unfounded self-perceptions, and thus, develop efficient digital functioning in contemporary society.
AB - The widespread belief is that youth, “digital natives” who live their entire lives in media-rich digital environments and are ubiquitously connected through social networks, naturally develop digital competencies. This study investigated digital literacies among 280 junior-high-school students with the aim of comparing participants’ perceived digital literacy competencies and their actual performance in relevant digital tasks. The findings showed that only a few of participants’ perceived skills were related to their actual performance. Generally, participants displayed high confidence in their digital literacies and significantly over-estimated their actual competencies. This gap was most evident in social-emotional skills, which were, on average, perceived by students as their strongest skills, while their actual level of performance was very low. Positive strong correlations were found between participants’ self-reported evaluations of different digital skills, indicating their perception as a single factor, while actual performance tests revealed low-to medium-size correlations between different literacies. For educational decision-makers, the findings highlight the importance of designing training programs aimed to develop students’ digital literacies, with a special emphasis on social-emotional competencies. Such training may enhance important competencies needed, reduce unfounded self-perceptions, and thus, develop efficient digital functioning in contemporary society.
KW - Digital literacy perception-performance gap
KW - Digital literacy skills
KW - Measurement of actual digital literacy competencies
KW - Self-perceptions of digital literacy competencies
KW - Technology-enhanced learning
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85049427056&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.compedu.2018.06.030
DO - 10.1016/j.compedu.2018.06.030
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AN - SCOPUS:85049427056
SN - 0360-1315
VL - 126
SP - 23
EP - 36
JO - Computers and Education
JF - Computers and Education
ER -