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Showing 1 to 15 of 34 results Save | Export
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Pangrazio, Luci; Selwyn, Neil; Cumbo, Bronwyn – Learning, Media and Technology, 2023
This paper explores the significance of schools' data infrastructures as a site of institutional power and (re)configuration. Using 'infrastructure studies' as a theoretical framework and drawing on in-depth studies of three contrasting Australian secondary schools, the paper takes a holistic look at schools' data infrastructures. In contrast to…
Descriptors: Data Use, Data Analysis, Data Collection, Information Management
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Selwyn, Neil; Facer, Keri – Oxford Review of Education, 2014
During the past 15 years of his career, John Furlong's research and writing has focused--in part--on digital technologies and people's everyday experiences of education. While hardly a technology expert, his work has shown an acute awareness of the significance of computers, the internet and mobile telephony in making sociological sense…
Descriptors: Educational Sociology, Technology Integration, Information Technology, Responsibility
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Selwyn, Neil – Learning, Media and Technology, 2015
The generation and processing of data through digital technologies is an integral element of contemporary society, as reflected in recent debates over online data privacy, "Big Data" and the rise of data mining and analytics in business, science and government. This paper outlines the significance of digital data within education,…
Descriptors: Information Technology, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Educational Research
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Henderson, Michael; Selwyn, Neil; Finger, Glenn; Aston, Rachel – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2015
The much-discussed potential of "technology-enhanced learning" is not always apparent in the day-to-day use of digital technology throughout higher education. Against this background, the present paper considers the digital devices and resources that students engage most frequently with during their university studies, what these…
Descriptors: Mass Media Use, Mass Media Effects, Higher Education, Undergraduate Students
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Selwyn, Neil – Oxford Review of Education, 2014
From the mid-1970s to the early 1980s, schools micro-computing in the UK developed from being a niche "hobbyist" activity to a prominent, officially mandated element of the national education system. Drawing on in-depth interviews with key actors of the time, this paper outlines the initial varied interpretations of schools…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Computer Uses in Education, Information Technology, Educational Policy
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Selwyn, Neil – Educational Review, 2011
Schools' use of digital technology has so far proved to be a peripheral feature of the Conservative-Liberal education agenda. Through a series of reductions to previously extensive bureaucratic and funding structures, the Coalition administration has presided over a swift but sustained withdrawal of state support for digital technology use in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Educational Policy
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Selwyn, Neil; Husen, Onno – Evaluation & Research in Education, 2010
According to governments around the world, developing and sustaining technological skills and competencies are seen to be a key part of a student's ability to engage with twenty-first century schooling. Yet to what extent do students believe in the association between technological competence and their success at school? This short research paper…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Educational Benefits, Foreign Countries, Educational Technology
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Selwyn, Neil; Potter, John; Cranmer, Sue – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2009
Based on survey data from 612 pupils in five English primary schools, this paper investigates children's engagement with information and communication technologies (ICTs) inside and outside the school context. Analysis of the data shows pupils' engagements with ICTs to be often perfunctory and unspectacular, especially within the school setting,…
Descriptors: Internet, Students, Information Technology, Educational Technology
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Selwyn, Neil – Oxford Review of Education, 2008
"Realising the potential of new technology" was one of the central educational themes of New Labour's 1997 election manifesto, with "information and communications technology" (ICT) established subsequently as a prominent feature of the Blair administration policy portfolio. As such New Labour can claim rightly to have made an…
Descriptors: Lifelong Learning, Educational Policy, Foreign Countries, Politics of Education
Gorard, Stephen; Selwyn, Neil – Adults Learning, 2008
In this article, the authors write about the myth of the "silver surfers"--those third-age learners adept at using the internet and other technologies for a mixture of formal and informal learning episodes. The notion of the silver surfer has endured since the latter half of the 1990s. It is sustained by the annual Silver Surfer week, media…
Descriptors: Informal Education, Older Adults, Internet, Computer Literacy
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Selwyn, Neil – Active Learning in Higher Education, 2008
Based on survey data from 1222 undergraduate students studying at UK higher education institutions, this article addresses students' engagement with the internet as a source of academic information for their studies. In particular the article explores how academic use of the internet is patterned by a range of potential influences such as…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Individual Characteristics, Internet, Educational Background
Selwyn, Neil; Gorard, Stephen – Adults Learning, 2008
In last month's "Adult Learning," the authors introduced the notion of "the silver surfer", a third-age learner adept at using the internet and other technologies for a mixture of formal and informal learning episodes. They suggested that neither this image nor its obverse, the truly disconnected older adult, is helpful in understanding the ICT…
Descriptors: Informal Education, Computer Uses in Education, Adult Learning, Older Adults
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Selwyn, Neil; Boraschi, Daniela; Ozkula, Suay Melisa – British Educational Research Journal, 2009
The relatively restricted nature of children's use of information and communications technologies (ICTs) inside the school setting has long been noted by researchers. With this in mind, this article offers a grounded analysis of drawings collected from 355 primary pupils (years three to six) from five English primary schools depicting desired…
Descriptors: Educational Benefits, Information Technology, Questionnaires, Access to Computers
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Selwyn, Neil – Journal of Vocational Education and Training: The Vocational Aspect of Education, 1997
Computer anxiety stems from several factors: psychological (locus of control, fear), sociological (isolation, dehumanization, stereotypes), and operational (negative experiences). Trainers should confront expectations and preconceptions, focus content toward the learner, and tailor the learning environment. (SK)
Descriptors: Computer Anxiety, Computer Literacy, Information Technology, Theories
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Selwyn, Neil; Gorard, Stephen – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2003
Discussion of information and communications technology in the United Kingdom focuses on contrasting government rhetoric concerning post-compulsory electronic learning with an analysis of data from the National Institute of Adult Continuing Education survey. Results suggest that access to ICT does not in itself make people more likely to…
Descriptors: Continuing Education, Foreign Countries, Government Role, Information Technology
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