NWO grant for research programme on digital literacy
Digital literacy has become indispensable for people to participate in contemporary society. However, polls estimate that more than 4 million Dutch adults are unable to perform basic online tasks, assess online information, or deal with privacy. They are at risk of being excluded from an increasingly digital society.
Prof. Marcel Broersma, dr. Joëlle Swart and dr. Anna van Cauwenberge from the Centre for Media and Journalism Studies have received a research grant from NWO to study in the next 5 years how citizens develop competences for and understanding of digital technologies and which factors promote or inhibit digital literacy.
Uniquely, this research programme starts from the everyday life experiences of citizens. Based on in-depth qualitative and longitudinal user research, it studies two key populations. First, together with childcare organization SKSG it studies children from different socioeconomic backgrounds between 8-12 years, when media habits develop within the family and educational context that sustain for the rest of their lives. Second, together with the National Library of the Netherlands, Biblionet Groningen and Alfa College, it studies low-literate adults, 2.5 million people within Dutch society who generally also lack digital skills, increasing the risk of digital exclusion.
Marcel Broersma: “ Together with our partners, we will provide a scientific basis for developing strategies for stakeholders such as teachers, parents, libraries and policy makers to facilitate digital literacy . This is important because society is becoming increasingly digital. To prevent that citizens will be excluded, we have to solve this important social issue. ”
The new research programme aligns with the projects that are being done within the Digital Literacy Coalition. This partnership of 19 knowledge and educational institutions, governments, social organizations and companies aims to make Groningen the most digitally literate city and province in the Netherlands in 2025.
For more information: prof. Marcel Broersma, m.j.broersma rug.nl
Last modified: | 11 February 2020 11.22 a.m. |
More news
-
08 October 2024
Tracking the tongue
Thomas Tienkamp and Teja Rebernik explain how fundamental research on articulation could help explain speech disorders and may contribute to the recovery of people with speech disorders in the future.
-
08 October 2024
Passion for sustainable fashion
Chilean journalist María Pilar Uribe Silva has dedicated half her life to making the clothing industry more sustainable. This summer, she started a PhD project at the RUG. ‘I think it is possible, a more just and sustainable clothing sector. What...
-
01 October 2024
Will there be a female American president?
Historian Jelte Olthof is interested in the origins, workings, and influence of the US Constitution. How does the 1787 Constitution function in present-day America? An America that is rapidly changing and where, in 2024, a female president may be...