Despite the widespread use of the term digital literacy, there is no common understanding of what it means or what skills and capabilities should be captured within it. The impact for higher education is that the term is misunderstood and significant assumptions are made regarding students’ digital literacy capabilities. The study reported in this paper explores the mismatch between academic expectations and perceptions of students’ digital literacy capabilities. Data was collected via a survey distributed to all Australian higher education institutions. Outcomes indicate that academics expectations are far higher than what they observe of students’ digital literacy capabilities and that digital literacy skills are not being adequately scaffolded and extended through the curriculum. Improving digital literacy outcomes will not occur until responsibility for teaching these capabilities is explicitly expressed and actioned in the context of disciplines and that opportunities are included throughout students’ educational experiences to scaffold digital literacy learning.
History
Pagination
103-112
Location
Geelong, Vic.
Start date
2018-11-25
End date
2018-11-28
Language
eng
Publication classification
E1 Full written paper - refereed
Editor/Contributor(s)
Campell M, Willems J, Adachi C, Blake D, Doherty I, Krishnan S, Macfarlane S, Ngo L, O'Donnell M, Palmer S, Riddell LJ, Story IH, Suri H, Tai J
Title of proceedings
ASCILITE 2018 : Open oceans: learning without borders : Proceedings of the 35th International Conference of Innovation, Practice and Research in the use of Educational Technologies in Tertiary Education
Event
Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education. Conference (35th : 2018 : Geelong, Vic.)
Publisher
Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education
Place of publication
Tugun, Qld.
Series
Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education Conference