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2016 | 61 | 1 | 59-76

Article title

Digital Natives or Not? How do Romanian Adolescents Cross the Boundaries of Internet Common Use

Authors

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
The present paper challenges the dominance of the digital natives’ agenda and turns its attention to the social context in which Internet usage among adolescents occurs. Findings indicate that even when young people are using the Internet with the same frequency, i.e. every day, the differences among them remain significant. Therefore, it can be argued that considering an entire cohort to be similar in terms of Internet use only due its age is a misconception. The way children make use of the Internet and the gratifications they gain after using it depend, as van Dijk (2005) showed, on the quality of access, on the level of skills, and on the personal (e.g. Experience, self-efficacy, confidence) and positional resources (e.g. Age, gender, socio-economic status). Questioning the main determinants that lead to the most advanced way to make use of the Internet, the logistic analysis shows that, in order for a Romanian adolescent to turn into an experienced user once he or she embedded the Internet in his or her everyday life, is a matter of skills, experience, and time online, and is less a matter of socioeconomic background. However, we have to keep in mind the previous path analysis’ findings, which emphasize that online experience, time spent online, self-efficacy, and digital skills are all determined, through direct or indirect effects, by demographic variables (i.e. age, gender and socio-economic status), even when age is held constant (Fizesan [Balea], 2012).

Publisher

Year

Volume

61

Issue

1

Pages

59-76

Physical description

Dates

published
2016-06-01
online
2016-07-15

Contributors

author
  • Faculty of Sociology and Social Work, Babeș-Bolyai University Cluj-Napoca

References

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  • Barbovschi, M., and Fizesan [Balea], B. (2013). Closing the gap, are we there yet? Reflections on the persistence of second-level digital divide among adolescents in Central and Eastern Europe. In M. Ragnedda and G. Muschert (eds): The Digital Divide: The Internet and Social Inequality in International Perspective. London: Routledge.
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Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_1515_subbs-2016-0003
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