Information Systems Frontiers in Knowledge Management
Information Systems Frontiers
Mobiles and the Norwegian teen: identity, gender and class
Perpetual contact
Designing portals
Encyclopedia of Computer Science
Students' Mental Models of the Internet and Their Didactical Exploitation in Informatics Education
Education and Information Technologies
Providing support to the expanding university
Proceedings of the 34th annual ACM SIGUCCS fall conference: expanding the boundaries
Unwillingness-to-communicate and college students' motives in SMS mobile messaging
Telematics and Informatics
Attitudinal and experiential predictors of technological expertise
Computers in Human Behavior
Comparing attitudes towards computer usage by undergraduates from 1986 to 2005
Computers in Human Behavior
How do you know they are learning? The importance of alignment in higher education
International Journal of Learning Technology
Youth and the Internet: Uses and practices in the home
Computers & Education
Using pedagogical dialogue as a vehicle to encourage faculty technology use
Computers & Education
The new informatics technologies in education debate
International Journal of Technology Enhanced Learning
MMORPGS and cognitive performance: A study with 1280 Brazilian high school students
Computers in Human Behavior
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From the Publisher:The bestselling book announcing the arrival of the Net Generationthose kids who are growing up digitalnow in paperback. Heraled by Library Journal as one of the Best Business Books of 1997,Growing Up Digital tells how the N-Generation is learning to communicate,work,shop and play in profoundly new waysand what implications this has for the world and business. Growing Up Digital offers an overview of the N-Generation,the generation of children who in the year 2000 will be between the ages of two and twenty-two. This group is a "tsunami" that will force changes in communications,retailing,branding,advertising,education,etc. Tapscott commends that the N-Generation are becoming so technologically proficient that they will "lap" their parents and leave them behind. The book also demonstrates the common characteristics of the N-Generation: acceptance of diversity,because the Net doesn't distinguish between racial or gender identities,curiosity about exploring and discovering new worlds over the Internet and assertiveness and self-reliance,which result when these kids realize they know more about technology than the adults around them. This eye-opening,fact-filled book profiles the rise of the Net Generation,which is using digital technology to change the way individuals and society interact. Essential reading for parents,teachers,policy makers,marketers,business leaders,social activists,and others,Growing Up Digital makes a compelling distinction between the passive medium of television and the explosion of interactive digital media,sparked by the computer and the Internet. Tapscott shows how children,empowered by new technology,are takingthe reins from their boomer parents and making inroads into all areas of society,including our education system,the government,and economy. The result is a timely,revealing look at our digital future that kids and adults will find both fascinating and instructive.