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Selwyn, Neil; Nemorin, Selena; Bulfin, Scott; Johnson, Nicola F. – Oxford Review of Education, 2017
The past decade has seen the expansion of personal digital technologies into schools. With many students and teachers now possessing smartphones, tablets, and laptops, schools are initiating one-to-one and "Bring Your Own Device" (BYOD) policies aiming to make use of these "personal devices" in classrooms. While often discussed…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Access to Computers, Ethnography
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Bulfin, Scott; Johnson, Nicola; Nemorin, Selena; Selwyn, Neil – Educational Studies, 2016
While digital technology is an integral feature of contemporary education, schools are often presumed to constrain and compromise students' uses of technology. This paper investigates students' experiences of school as a context for digital technology use. Drawing upon survey data from three Australian secondary schools (n = 1174), this paper…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Student Surveys, Secondary School Students
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Selwyn, Neil – Oxford Review of Education, 2014
From the mid-1970s to the early 1980s, schools micro-computing in the UK developed from being a niche "hobbyist" activity to a prominent, officially mandated element of the national education system. Drawing on in-depth interviews with key actors of the time, this paper outlines the initial varied interpretations of schools…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Computer Uses in Education, Information Technology, Educational Policy
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Selwyn, Neil; Potter, John; Cranmer, Sue – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2009
Based on survey data from 612 pupils in five English primary schools, this paper investigates children's engagement with information and communication technologies (ICTs) inside and outside the school context. Analysis of the data shows pupils' engagements with ICTs to be often perfunctory and unspectacular, especially within the school setting,…
Descriptors: Internet, Students, Information Technology, Educational Technology
Gorard, Stephen; Selwyn, Neil – Adults Learning, 2008
In this article, the authors write about the myth of the "silver surfers"--those third-age learners adept at using the internet and other technologies for a mixture of formal and informal learning episodes. The notion of the silver surfer has endured since the latter half of the 1990s. It is sustained by the annual Silver Surfer week, media…
Descriptors: Informal Education, Older Adults, Internet, Computer Literacy
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Gorard, Stephen; Selwyn, Neil; Madden, Louise – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2003
Analysis of British survey data on 5,885 adults showed that 42% reported learning participation in the last 3 years; 36% reported none since leaving school. Access to information/communications technology was associated with age, class, and educational attainment. Technology did not itself increase participation among those already inclined not to…
Descriptors: Access to Computers, Adults, Foreign Countries, Information Technology
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Selwyn, Neil; Gorard, Stephen – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2003
Policy discourse about lifelong learning has shifted from economic imperative to social and moral pursuit and intrinsic good. Despite this, the emphasis on technological solutions in Information Age discourse subjugates social, civic, and political concerns to an economic competitiveness rationale. (Contains 66 references.) (SK)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Educational Attitudes, Educational Objectives, Educational Technology
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Selwyn, Neil – School Leadership & Management, 2000
England's 1.6 billion-pound National Grid for Learning initiative represents an unprecedented government commitment to educational use of information and communications technology (ICT). NGfL will integrate ICT into all schooling areas via increased funding, teacher training, and simulation of a systemwide "ICT culture." Implications and…
Descriptors: Computer Networks, Computer Uses in Education, Educational Policy, Educational Technology
Selwyn, Neil – Adults Learning (England), 2002
Making information and communications technology part of the social, cultural, and economic fabric of people's lives is about initiating deep-rooted societal changes. Adult education initiatives alone are unlikely have a radical effect on those changes. (JOW)
Descriptors: Access to Information, Adult Education, Information Technology, Role of Education
Selwyn, Neil; Gorard, Stephen – Adults Learning (England), 1999
Information technology can remove barriers of time and location, institutional requirements, and prior schooling attitudes. However, it can impose new ones such as socioeconomic inequities in access. Privately sponsored virtual learning environments tend to focus on only a narrow base of core skills and competencies. (SK)
Descriptors: Access to Education, Access to Information, Adult Learning, Information Technology
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Selwyn, Neil; Gorard, Stephen; Williams, Sara – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2001
Public policy rhetoric depicts information/communications technologies as a means of transforming lifelong education, freeing individual learners, broadening social inclusion, and improving competitiveness. However, concerns about social exclusion are predominantly economic, and increasing participation does not mean the same thing as widening…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Educational Policy, Foreign Countries, Information Technology
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Selwyn, Neil; Gorard, Stephen; Williams, Sara – Studies in the Education of Adults, 2002
Interviews with 36 adult learners in information-communications technology (ICT) settings, using the concept of learning trajectories, revealed barriers to widening participation through ICT. In addition to technical shortcomings, social, economic, cultural, and political issues hinder the process, including lack of innovative instruction and…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Adult Learning, Adults, Foreign Countries
Selwyn, Neil; Fitz, John – 2000
This paper looks at private interest involvement in education Information and Communications Technology (ICT) policymaking and implementation in the United Kingdom, using the National Grid for Learning (NGfL), an initiative to connect every U.K. school to the Internet and create an online connected learning community of teachers and students with…
Descriptors: Access to Information, Educational Cooperation, Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education