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Tuesday 16 August 2011

Digital citizenship and what it could mean.

Have you ever used the internet to comment on what you see online, share information about yourself or others, communicate with friends, play games, get material for an assignment or buy stuff? If you answered YES to any of these then you are a digital citizen.

According to Wikipedia:

"A digital citizen commonly refers to a person that participates in society using a certain amount of information technology...through means of digital tools such as computers or mobile phones, along with access to these devices...
People characterizing themselves as digital citizens often use information technology extensively, creating blogs, use social networking and other means of modern communication. Digital citizenship begins the first time any child, teen, and/or adult signs up for an email address, posts pictures online, buys merchandise online, and/or participates in any [kind of] electronic function."

Using the above criteria, at face value, it would seem that most, if not all of us are digital citizens.  However, a discussion has been happening in the Library over the difference between digital citizen and digital native, terms which are often used interchangeably. The feeling in general here is that these are actually distinctly different terms.
One of the ideas put forth is that most students would be considered digital natives as they have been born into this era, where it is all there for them to access, they are not afraid of using the technology and have reasonably unrestricted access to it.  Depending on our ages many of the staff fit into the digital citizen term – or in some cases may even need to be ‘naturalised’ before fitting into this terminology.

Another comment made was that instead of digital citizen, maybe digital immigrant is a better term, with digital citizen being used to define someone who can manage their digital footprint safely and responsibly in our online world, and this is a comment that I can feel comfortable with.    

I cannot give you my own definition. This is because the definition is a collaboration of what many people think, not just one singular person coming up with the idea. Many websites split the population up even further. Digital toddlers, digital deniers and digital immigrants are some of my favourites. I don’t know how far I have to go until I earn my digital citizenship but I am excited about the places that it will take me (digitally of course!).

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