Digital literacy (or digital literacies), e-skills, e-competences, skills for the Information Society, etc. There is plenty of literature about digital literacy in a broad sense. And there are even as many names as works to describe concepts, similar one to each other, but with shades and subtleties that make them have yet different meanings.
In my opinion, two problems are both the cause and the consequence of this lack of understanding, closely bound one to the other one.
The first one is that, most usually, digital skills are looked at at a very micro level. For instance, the most instrumental digital literacy (i.e. technological literacy) can be described without taking into account informational literacy, personal knowledge management, the sociocultural framework and so.
The second one is that, almost always, digital skills are not taken dynamically, but as a pretty static, closed black box. Take media literacy as an example, where a (for me) necessary corollary to the acquisition and mastering of instrumental multimedia skills should be followed by reflections on the change of the Fourth Estate, the rise of the Fifth Estate and so.
Actually, it is especially this last part, the dynamics of digital literacy and its actual application to everyday life — education, work, leisure, politics, social engagement — the most interesting to me and, to my knowledge, the most unattended one.
Had I to picture such dynamics, I would do it this way:
Where concepts are:
- Technological Literacy: the skills to interact with hardware and software
- Informational Literacy: the competences to deal with information, normally by means of ICTs (applying Technological Literacy). We could draw here two stages: a more instrumental one, related on how to get (relevant) information, and a more strategic one related to how to manage that information (or knowledge, if we speak of personal knowledge management)
- Media Literacy: skills and competences to deal with several media, make them interact and integrate them in a single output. I believe we could also draw a lower level, multimedia, where interaction would be more mechanical, and a higher one, crossmedia, where interaction and integration respond not to technical possibilities but to a strategic design, building an ecosystem of different media (and not a simple multimedia output)
- Digital Presence: Is centred in the person. These are the digital skills to monitor and establish a digital identity, and the skills to actively define it and use it for networking or interacting with other people digitally
- e-Awareness: the most strategic (even philosophical) stage is the one related with being aware on how the world and our position — as a person, group, firm, institution — varies because of digital technologies
These concepts can be rephrased as:
- Technological Literacy: HOW
- Informational Literacy: WHAT
- Media Literacy: WHERE
- Digital Presence: WHO
- e-Awareness: WHY
Some examples on what these digital skills and competences mean in everyday life are as follows:
The approach above is completely exploratory and fails to be complete. It is, though, a reflection of what I sense is happening at the applied level, when sometimes too much conceptual figures have to be put to work at home, in the school, at work or social and political engagement. In other words, how do we put the tools — and problems, and questions — of the Information Society in the hands of leaders, decision-takers and policy-makers.
We need not static frames, but dynamic paths. From 0 to 100. From the simplest needs to the deepest understanding. And build bridges amongst them stages.
Update:
This theoretical framework has been later on developed in Peña-López, I. (2010). From laptops to competences: bridging the digital divide in higher education. In Revista de Universidad y Sociedad del Conocimiento (RUSC), Monograph: Framing the Digital Divide in Higher Education, 7 (1). Barcelona: UOC.
If you need to cite this article in a formal way (i.e. for bibliographical purposes) I dare suggest:
Peña-López, I. (2009) “Towards a comprehensive definition of digital skills” In ICTlogy,
#66, March 2009. Barcelona: ICTlogy.
Retrieved month dd, yyyy from
https://ictlogy.net/review/?p=1771
Previous post: Digital Divide, Government and ICTs for Education
Next post: Access to knowledge and digital divide
25 Comments to “Towards a comprehensive definition of digital skills” »
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI
Dear IP
As usual I agree with you. I’ve been struggling to collect/integrate the wide perspective of the e-skills spread around.
http://www.mindmeister.com/10614530
I didn’t find the CC in your ‘post’ may I add your point of view in our research Oxford?
best
Cristobal
btw. I hope to meet you in April at UOC ;)
Dear Cristóbal,
The CC license is in the footer of the whole site, so feel free to use it wherever.
Nice you liked it :)
Pingback: “Hacia una definición completa de las habilidades digitales” « opiniones
Pingback: links for 2009-03-18 – Innovation in College Media
Pingback: Policies to increase ICT usage in developed countries « International Political Economy and Development
Pingback: P2P Foundation » Blog Archive » ICTlogy » Darwin at the Information Society: adaptation (and benefits) or extinction
Dear Ismael, great review!
I only would like to inform that here in Italy my team at UniFi has leaded a project on Digital Competence Assessment. Here is the website: http://www.digitalcompetence.org
All the best!
Thanks for pointing to your research, Antonio.
Great bibliography there: http://www.digitalcompetence.org/?page_id=10
Pingback: Competencias digitales en las Administraciones Públicas | El caparazon
Pingback: Competencias digitales para la sociedad red (I) | Blog Nodos Ele
Pingback: Competencias digitales para la sociedad red (2) | Blog Nodos Ele
Pingback: ICTlogy » Digital Divide and Social Inclusion (VII): Education for the Knowledge Society through Social Inclusion
Pingback: Tareas 2.0: de la conciencia lingüÃstica a la conciencia digital « Hederahelix
Pingback: E-Awaresnes « djimenezelrn10
Pingback: ICTlogy » SociedadRed » La evolución de las TIC en los hogares españoles: comentarios y propuestas
Pingback: Una postura crÃtica ante la relación entre tecnologÃa y aprendizaje (comentario crÃtico) « djimenezelrn10
Pingback: algarabÃas » TecnologÃa y aprendizaje. Apuntes para una lectura crÃtica
Pingback: ICTlogy » ICT4D Blog » Darwin at the Information Society: adaptation (and benefits) or extinction
Pingback: ICTlogy » SociedadRed » Predicciones para Social Media en 2011
Pingback: algarabÃas » Algunas notas sobre la dicotomÃa PLE/Portfolio
Pingback: links for 2011-07-25 | Gamer/Learner
Pingback: Daniel Jiménez — TRAL » Re/pensando mi Ambiente Personal de Aprendizaje
Pingback: #ETMOOC – Digital literacy | serenaturri's Blog
Pingback: Algunas notas sobre la dicotomÃa PLE/Portfolio | AlgarabÃas
Pingback: Competencias digitales, desarrollo profesional y transformación de las organizaciones | co.labora.red