Start date: October 2020
Award: General
Subject Pathway:
Digital Economy and Society
Thematic Cluster:
Economy, Enterprise, and Productivity Cluster
Pre-teen childrens digital social worlds a participatory and creative exploration
I would like to find out more about what children think about their digital worlds, how they build and form their relationships with each other using digital technology, how digital technology makes them feel (e.g., happy, safe, unsafe, scared, angry, confused), and what they would want to change in the future.
Most research focuses on teenagers and secondary school pupils rather than children and is often not from the child's perspective but what adults think about them. So, I am interested in what children think about their own digital social lives.
[AIMS]
A1 – To explore pre-teen perspectives and experiences of digital technology in their everyday lives.
A2 – To explore how pre-teen children’s peer relationships and new formations of gender and sexuality impact their experiences of the digital social world.
A3 – To understand how pre-teen children’s experiences, thoughts, and feelings of the digital world impact what they want their future digital social world to look like.
[RESEARCH QUESTIONS]
RQ1) What kinds of peer relationship cultures (e.g., interactions, group identities, friendships, boyfriends, girlfriends etc.) shape the everyday digital worlds of pre-teen children?
RQ2) What are pre-teen children’s thoughts, feelings, and experiences of the digital in their everyday lives? (e.g., what they enjoy, find fun, what problems they have, what makes them feel safe or unsafe)
RQ3) What do pre-teen children want to see happen differently or change in the future regarding their everyday digital worlds?
[METHODOLOGY]
I will undertake this research through an exploratory qualitative research design, using participatory and creative methods, such as qualitative friendship group interviews and creative workshops.
[PROPOSED CONTRIBUTION]
This proposal addresses contemporary research gaps in a significantly under-researched area. This research is particularly relevant due to children now growing up in the digital age where they are “encountering continual technological innovation which brings new risks and opportunities” (Stoilova, Livingstone and Nandagiri, 2019, p.4). Furthermore, the timing of this research gives an opportunity to support the introduction of the new statutory Relationships and Sex/uality Education (GOV.WALES., 2020) by outlining what addressing the relationships between e-safety and healthy relationships looks like within ‘age appropriate’ RSE. The findings of this research would be transferable because they can be applied to the Welsh and English context of statutory RSE provision.