"I prefer to build trust": Parenting approaches to nurturing their children's digital skills

被引:5
作者
Savic, Milovan [1 ]
机构
[1] Swinburne Univ Technol, Hawthorn, Vic, Australia
关键词
Digital skills; parents; teenagers; digital literacy; family; social media; qualitative study; MEDIATION THEORY;
D O I
10.1177/1329878X211046396
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
Positioned as digital natives, children are assumed to be experts in using social media. Though they are quick in picking up technical social media features, their ability to fully comprehend online risks is often questioned, raising parental anxiety about their children's engagement with digital media. While academic research has attempted to identify and measure digital skills, little is known about how these skills are negotiated within the family. This article draws on a qualitative study looking at the ways families with pre-teens negotiate the use of social media. Data collection included home-based interviews with 15 families from Melbourne, Australia (n = 30). In each family, the eldest child (10 to 15 years old) and one of the parents were separately interviewed. Additionally, social media tours (a first-hand display of online practices) complemented interviews with children. This article discusses how confidence in children's abilities, as well as personal perceptions of the parent's digital capabilities, affects how the parent navigates their children's use of digital media, as well as their level of success in developing safe digital practices with their children. This article uncovers three dominant parental approaches that emerged across the sample: the watchdog, the chaperon, and the collaborator. Central to each of these are varying degrees of trust in a child's ability to engage in safe practices online.
引用
收藏
页码:122 / 135
页数:14
相关论文
共 48 条
[41]   Family mediation of preschool children's digital media practices at home [J].
Scott, Fiona Louise .
LEARNING MEDIA AND TECHNOLOGY, 2022, 47 (02) :235-250
[42]   Parental mediation of teenagers' video game playing: Antecedents and consequences [J].
Shin, Wonsun ;
Huh, Jisu .
NEW MEDIA & SOCIETY, 2011, 13 (06) :945-962
[43]   Parents' Concerns About Their Teenage Children's Internet Use [J].
Sorbring, Emma .
JOURNAL OF FAMILY ISSUES, 2014, 35 (01) :75-96
[44]   A qualitative study into parental mediation of adolescents' internet use [J].
Symons, Katrien ;
Ponnet, Koen ;
Walrave, Michel ;
Heirman, Wannes .
COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 2017, 73 :423-432
[45]  
Third A., 2016, NEGOTIATING DIGITAL, P41
[46]   Development and validation of the Internet Skills Scale (ISS) [J].
van Deursen, Alexander J. A. M. ;
Helsper, Ellen J. ;
Eynon, Rebecca .
INFORMATION COMMUNICATION & SOCIETY, 2016, 19 (06) :804-823
[47]   It's Complicated: The Social Lives of Networked Teens [J].
Vitak, Jessica .
JOURNAL OF BROADCASTING & ELECTRONIC MEDIA, 2014, 58 (03) :470-472
[48]   Parent-child role reversal in ICT domestication: media brokering activities and emotional labours of Chinese "study mothers" in Singapore [J].
Wang, Yang .
JOURNAL OF CHILDREN AND MEDIA, 2020, 14 (03) :267-284