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Born Digital: Understanding the First Generation of Digital Natives

Born Digital: Understanding the First Generation of Digital Natives
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ISBN13: 9780465005154
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Two leading experts explain the brave new world inhabited by "digital natives"--the first generation born and raised completely wired.

The most enduring change wrought by the digital revolution is neither the new business models nor the new search algorithms, but rather the massive generation gap between those who were born digital and those who were not. The first generation of "digital natives"--children who were born into and raised in the digital world--is now coming of age, and soon our world will be reshaped in their image. Our economy, our cultural life, even the shape of our family life will be forever transformed.

But who are these digital natives? How are they different from older generations, and what is the world they're creating going to look like? In Born Digital, leading Internet and technology experts John Palfrey and Urs Gasser offer a sociological portrait of this exotic tribe of young people who can seem, even to those merely a generation older, both extraordinarily sophisticated and strangely narrow.

Based on original research and advancing new theories, Born Digital explores a broad range of issues, from the highly philosophical to the purely practical: What does identity mean for young people who have dozens of online profiles and avatars? Should we worry about privacy issues? Or is privacy even a relevant value for digital natives? How does the concept of safety translate into an increasingly virtual world? Is "stranger-danger" a real problem, or a red herring?

A smart, practical guide to a brave new world and its complex inhabitants, Born Digital will be essential reading for parents, teachers, and the myriad of confused adults who want to understand the digital present--and shape the digital future.

 

What Customers Say About Born Digital: Understanding the First Generation of Digital Natives:

getAbstract recommends this book to lawmakers, hiring managers, teachers and parents who want to understand life in the cyberculture. Although they often indulge in platitudes and generalizations, they bring a new, useful focus to the discussion. They are members of "the first generation of digital natives." Internet and law experts John Palfrey and Urs Gasser offer an accessible, informed and concerned investigation into cyberculture. Of necessity with this kind of structure, the authors repeat some of the same points, such as the glut of information and the interconnected nature of online life - but they do so to show how these core factors affect different areas. Many kids under the age of 15 have no idea what a typewriter is. Why would they be familiar with such an outmoded, archaic tool. They delve into such important issues as privacy and Internet safety, and they examine how these issues affect young people, in particular.

Being aware about what is happened in the deep internet where several dates are saved and knowing that normal users don't know how to go there, is important to allowed us to do more conscious choices. The main thesis Born Digital is that the passage from the analog paradigm to the digital paradigm is deeply transforming the way how digital natives are living. We are committed with our context and we can't be scared or alienated spectators that do nothing about what is happened. But, once more the fail to do same decisive questions: how we are the new generations learning to solve their inner a external conflicts, how they learn to lead with their own aggressively.

How the digital age is affecting the way we search for this need. For instances, the first chapter is a real good description about the influences of digital age in the way how digital natives are building and managing there identities. Is this new time affecting the way of love and the experience of being loved. Using the Brazilian pedagogue Paulo Freire's definition, literacy is about reading the word and reading the world. One of the concepts that I believe is influenced by this pragmatism is authors' idea of Media Literacy. What they are learning from the way adults (parents, educators) solve conflicts.

But literacy is not only about how to use a specific language. First of all, they want to avoid two extreme attitudes: apocalyptic and naïf. What are their fears. Such deep transformations are affecting their self perception and the way they interact with others and with the reality. Born digital seems to me an excessive pragmatic book. Born Digital is a good and serious dialogue with this generation, but we need to go deeper. The second option that I would like to refer is what I consider the best intuition of Born Digital.

Born Digital is a serious tentative of understand the new and emergent digital paradigm where a part of the new generation is living and simultaneously help his readers (specially parents and educators) to do the right questions about it. The importance given in the book to the critical thinking shows how deep is t Palfrey and Gasser's concern in this specific point. I am particular amazed with all the problematic concerned with digital dossiers and how many information is possible to collect about each one of us searching on internet. Media Literacy is about helping our students to be conscientious how using the new media and technology they are creating the world and how our perception of the world is transformed in a definitive way by technology. But the authors option almost merely descriptive. Two good examples of this problems are the gap between digital natives and those from the same generation that don't have access to technologies as internet, and the problematic of multitasking and its impact on education or daily life. Finally I would like to emphasize the absence of what I would like to call an anthropological concern. Are their relations in School excessively based on competition.

In fact the authors defend that the attempt to understand our digital era must involve different actors, each one with his or her responsibilities. Those dates help us to realize how our perception is changing. What are the most genuine needs of the human being. In fact our relation with the world is never neutral. I recognize that the author give a significant importance to the dates from neuroscience. To explain this idea in a graphic way our actors created a diagram with several circles. There John Palfrey and Urs Gasser do in a balanced way the analysis of the youth generation's violence reception through the new and the old media.

This example gives me the opportunity to highlight one of the most significant goals of this book: made its readers more able to choose and more able to help digital natives being more conscious of the consequences of their options in terms of their relation with the digital world. Another good example is the chapter about violence. In the inner circle are the digital native that are the most well situated to lead us through this world. After reading Born Digital I consider important to analyze some critical points of this book. Avoiding an apocalyptic attitude they are able two let us know all the possibilities that the digital era is offering to the new generation. By action or omission we participate in the construction of our own culture. They related in an appropriated way the consequences of that reception with the social and economic context.

For all that one of the most important attitudes is our ability to dialogue with the digital natives. As it's normal in a period of a paradigmatic change there are a lot of new questions and sometimes we've the temptation of trying to answer to the new questions with the tools and the concepts of the `old paradigm'. In fact, being so exhaustive in its descriptions and assuming important apprehensions and hopes, the book fails to do decisive questions. Avoiding a naïf approach they are able to stress some serious problems. The consequences are important: Media Literacy isn't about giving our students skills or contents that they will use in a neutral way. Palfrey and Gasser gave to their readers a significant and pertinent amount of dates about all the topics they analyze.

Using Thomas Kuhn concepts we may say that we are in the middle of a paradigmatic change. The questions they do may be formulated like this: How to protect ourselves, how to produce, how to create, how to manage information.

In the book they analyze with great detail how the digital revolution is affecting so different aspects of live as education, privacy, creativity, the way as we manage information,.Facing all this topics the authors have done two previous options that I consider significantly important. After them we found friends and family, followed by educators, than companies and finally the state and the law.

In fact all consternations seem to be related with a practical use of some specific tools. But at the same time the book doesn't ask the deepest anthropological questions.

Is fair to recognize that Born Digital is the result of a serious work of research. We are living a period of transition.

The advantageous of this choice is to call our attention that the options that we do about the world we are living should be shared. In my opinion they fail to do a serious Ethic consideration of all these changes: what kind of world are we building and most important what kind of world we want to build.

Walking through the jagged landscape of digital identities and dossiers, over the quicksand of safety and privacy to the questions of creators, innovators and pirates, overload, aggressors and learners - without the reactionary premature autopsies of generational attrition.The authors, John Palfrey of Harvard and Urs Gasser of U of St. Although there are no ground breaking epiphanies in this book, I truly appreciated the measured response to digital ubiquity and the effect it has on a generation who knows nothing less.Born Digital is a comprehensive view of what we can expect, an educated guess of the impacts of the first generation of digital natives. Gallen accept the future that is now realized, and design a discourse to engage the whole community of the digi natives, their parents and teachers, and law makers to build the skill set to protect our youth growing up digital, empowered with knowledge and best practices, instead of preaching abstinence and prohibition, fear tactics and taboos that are sure to push them farther out into the Ethernet and harm's way.Born Digital is comprehensive, insightful, and illuminates the reader to the environment, paradigm and nuances of what it is to be a Digital Native.

For instance, the information quality in our network and how too many bad qualities such as violence games, sexual shows could have a big effect on our kids behaviors. This is only one from many issues that the book have discussed to knowledge the readers about.Over all, the book was very beneficial to me and I highly recommend everyone to read it. For example, there are some issues in the book about privacy, safety and many others in todays digital natives that has no clear solution or in a better words the solution was written in the wrong places. The author could have done better in organizing the Born Digital book. The book has negative and positive issues, which I will explain in the coming paragraphs. After reading Born Digital as a required task for my English 102 class, I found this book very interesting to read. First, I realized some negative issues while I was reading this book such as the lack of organization. In my opinion, It could have been better for organization if he have set up especial area for his solutions in each chapter or specializing some chapters for solutions.Second, this book have opened my mind to many issues about technology and digital natives that I never thought about, which is a positive thing that every reader is looking for.

He talks about how we, digital natives, use things like Facebook, Myspace and Twitter to communicate with friends nowadays and thats mainly how we talk. But for those in the the older generations, this book could be very useful. Do not get me wrong when I say the some people do not use common sense when it comes to the internet but he does not even try to give other points and views on digital natives. as i said he did not argue many other points and he was very repetitive in a lot of things that he said.

I would not recommend this book for younger people like myself who have grown up around the internet and technology as it really only made me upset. "Born Digital" Talks about how Digital Natives, those who were born and grew up around technology, are so subjective to be being victims online. It has a lot of stuff that is informative and could be helpful whenever you let younger children get online and even help yourselves in some ways. I have been exposed to technology ever since I can remember. I had to read this book for a college class and am required to write my thoughts about it. This book goes everywhere from people getting your personal information all the way to predators online. When I read this book, I felt as though Palfrey was calling out all those digital natives saying they were ignorant to the dangers online. How things like google and wikipedia are becoming the norm in the way we learn things.He even goes as far as calling out violent videogames as being the main cause for violence in children but he does not even think about bringing up violent movies, TV shows and even violence at home.

The main reason I did not like this book is because I felt as though Palfrey was calling me ignorant to the web world in which has integrated itself in my daily life. This Book is definitely not one of my favorites. It is very one sided and truly only tries to show one side of every argument.Being a digital native myself, I know first-hand how the internet and technology had effected my life. The book however did have some good insight on things I would not have thought about but I definitely could have figured out.

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