DocumentCode
1805354
Title
Bloggers Vs. "AOL Users": A Digital Divide of Use and Literacy
Author
Andrews, Gillian
fYear
2010
fDate
5-8 Jan. 2010
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
10
Abstract
Ethnomethodology suggests that paying attention to errors yields insight into everyday behavior patterns missed by other analyses. This paper presents data from a research project using grounded ethnographic and linguistic analysis to understand blog comment threads where blogging "natives" - bloggers and their readers - identify "strangers" comments as errors. Through this analysis, a previously unrecognized digital divide becomes visible. Strangers lack natives\´ understanding of the Internet\´s structure. Their references to online literacy elements also differ. Taking the demographics of natives and strangers into account, gender appears to be a factor in this divide. Affirming recent suggestions that digital divide studies should transition to a focus on usage patterns and quality, not access quantity, this study suggests digital literacy education should focus more intently on domain name comprehension and other literacies specific to new text forms.
Keywords
Internet; Web sites; computer science education; demography; social sciences computing; AOL users; blog comment threads; bloggers; demographics; digital literacy education; grounded ethnographic; linguistic analysis; online literacy elements; Demography; Educational institutions; Facebook; Government; Information services; Internet; MySpace; Web sites; Writing; Yarn;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
System Sciences (HICSS), 2010 43rd Hawaii International Conference on
Conference_Location
Honolulu, HI
ISSN
1530-1605
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-5509-6
Electronic_ISBN
1530-1605
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/HICSS.2010.85
Filename
5428615
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