An ecological perspective on children’s play with digital technologies in South Africa and the United Kingdom

IF 0.6 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH International Journal of Play Pub Date : 2023-07-03 DOI:10.1080/21594937.2023.2235466
F. Scott, J. Marsh, K. Murris, D. Ng’ambi, B. S. Thomsen, C. Bannister, J. Bishop, K. Dixon, T. Giorza, A. Hetherington, C. Lawrence, B. Nutbrown, B. Parry, J. Peers, E. Scholey
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Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper reports a mixed-methods study of the play of children (3–11) with digital technologies in South Africa (SA) and the United Kingdom (UK), discussing the interrelatedness of access to devices and the Internet, contextual realities, and adult-child relations. An adapted ecological model [Bronfenbrenner (1979) The ecology of human development: Experiments by nature and design. Harvard University Press] guided analysis. Parents and carers in the UK were more likely than their SA counterparts to report children's engagement in object, construction and transgressive digital play, correlating with access differences, especially to tablet devices. However, play incorporating technologies was extensive, even in contexts in SA with limited access to a wide range of devices or readily available internet. Despite relying primarily on smartphones, children in SA were more likely to create digital content unassisted than those in the UK. The qualitative data complicate understandings of particular play types, including transgressive digital play.
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南非和英国儿童使用数字技术玩耍的生态视角
本文报告了一项混合方法研究,研究了南非(SA)和英国(UK) 3-11岁儿童使用数字技术的游戏情况,讨论了设备和互联网的相互关系、情境现实以及成人与儿童的关系。一个适应的生态模型[Bronfenbrenner(1979):人类发展的生态学:自然和设计的实验。][哈佛大学出版社]引导分析。英国的父母和照顾者比南非的父母和照顾者更有可能报告孩子参与物体、建筑和越界的数字游戏,这与访问差异有关,尤其是平板设备。然而,结合技术的游戏是广泛的,即使在SA的情况下,使用各种设备或随时可用的互联网也是有限的。尽管主要依赖智能手机,南非的孩子比英国的孩子更有可能在没有帮助的情况下创造数字内容。定性数据使对特定游戏类型的理解复杂化,包括越界的数字游戏。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Play
International Journal of Play Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
20.00%
发文量
60
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Play is an inter-disciplinary publication focusing on all facets of play. It aims to provide an international forum for mono- and multi-disciplinary papers and scholarly debate on all aspects of play theory, policy and practice from across the globe and across the lifespan, and in all kinds of cultural settings, institutions and communities. The journal will be of interest to anthropologists, educationalists, folklorists, historians, linguists, philosophers, playworkers, psychologists, sociologists, therapists and zoologists.
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