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Teens are really good with Web 2.0 tools: Expert

Natalia Sinitskaya, a PhD candidate at York University's Faculty of Education in Toronto, is exploring digital literacy with the idea of examining the potential of using Web 2.0 environments in education.

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Teens are really good with Web 2.0 tools: Expert
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According to a study of teens and their use of Web 2.0 technologies, adolescents are really good at it.

Natalia Sinitskaya, a PhD candidate at York University's Faculty of Education in Toronto, is exploring digital literacy with the idea of examining the potential of using Web 2.0 environments in education.

To further her research, she did a pilot study involving interviews with a handful of adolescents to sound out their uses and views about Web 2.0 technologies.

She presents the results of that research in a paper to be delivered at the 2010 Congress for the Humanities and Social Sciences taking place at Montreal's Concordia University.

Sinitskaya says the teens she interviewed were not only adept at using the technology to connect with each other socially, they were using it in innovative ways. For instance, she said one teen took to watching video diaries posted on the Web in places like YouTube. She would then make friends (technologically) with people she liked based on their video logs.

Sinitskaya says teens are also quite sophisticated when it comes to assessing the Web tools: Her respondents, for example, were able to offer thoughtful evaluations of the different features, style and uses of Facebook versus MySpace, and as a result would carefully weigh whether they might choose one platform over another.

"That goes counter to the popular expectation that teenagers don't know what they are doing," she says. As well, she says her respondents had all investigated privacy settings on their platforms and selected ones they thought appropriate.

Sinitskaya says she believes the ability to use Web 2.0 tools is a new form of literacy, and as adolescents learn to manipulate them, their communication will move away from plain writing to a new form of multi-dimensional communication.

"My research is showing that adolescents are creating that new communication," she says.

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