Detailed Information on Publication Record
2013
Closing the gap, are we there yet? Reflections on the persistence of second-level digital divide among adolescents in Central and Eastern Europe.
BARBOVSCHI, Monica and Bianca FIZESANBasic information
Original name
Closing the gap, are we there yet? Reflections on the persistence of second-level digital divide among adolescents in Central and Eastern Europe.
Authors
BARBOVSCHI, Monica (642 Romania, guarantor, belonging to the institution) and Bianca FIZESAN (642 Romania)
Edition
1. vyd. Oxon, The Digital Divide: Social Inequality and the Internet in International Perspective, p. 179-192, 14 pp. first edition, one volume, 2013
Publisher
Routledge
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Kapitola resp. kapitoly v odborné knize
Field of Study
50100 5.1 Psychology and cognitive sciences
Country of publisher
Italy
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Publication form
printed version "print"
RIV identification code
RIV/00216224:14230/13:00067533
Organization unit
Faculty of Social Studies
ISBN
978-0-415-52544-2
UT WoS
000326814600013
Keywords in English
digital divide; internet
Tags
International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 18/2/2019 12:16, Mgr. Blanka Farkašová
Abstract
V originále
Although the divides in Internet access seem to have diminished, there are still significant differences in terms of the digital skills the young users possess (Hargittai, 2002). Drawing upon the data collected in the EU Kids Online II project, the present chapter investigates the differences in digital competencies and self-confidence of teenagers in four countries in Central and Eastern Europe: Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria and Poland. Building on a conflict perspective which emphasizes how Internet use, understood like a package of particular knowledge and skills, plays an important role in maintaining inequalities (Witte & Mannon, 2009), our study showed that parental background accounts for differences in their own use of internet but also in the digital skills of their children. Moreover, the results showed that adult patterns of internet use reproduce rather than challenge class advantages or disadvantages that parents pass on their children. Finally, children-specific differentiations of use contribute to the deepening of the divides.
Links
EE2.3.20.0184, research and development project |
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