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Disembodied citizens and communities: How new technologies are changing how students learn, collaborate and construct civic identities. Hans Ibold, Indiana University Jenna McWilliams, Indiana University Facilitators: Mary F. Price, IUPUI and Daniel T. Hickey, Indiana University.
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Disembodied citizens and communities: How new technologies are changing how students learn, collaborate and construct civic identities Hans Ibold, Indiana University Jenna McWilliams, Indiana University Facilitators: Mary F. Price, IUPUI and Daniel T. Hickey, Indiana University
Planting Seeds… • How does one measure civic learning in a virtual context? • How is social media and other information & communication technologies shaping & materializing shifts in how we define and act as citizens and community members? • What do these cultural and generations shifts mean for the practice of and research on service learning (and civic learning more broadly)?
Planting Seeds… • What are the knowledge, skills, capacities associated with civic engagement online—are they the same as F2F CE/SL experiences? • In what ways is the developing movement in Digital Civic Engagement align with the direction and goals of SL?
The “Dutiful” Citizen (Bennett 2008) • Sense of obligation to participate in government-centered activities • Voting as the core democratic act, supported by surrounding knowledge and contact with government • Mass media news informs about issues and government • Joins civil society organizations and/or expresses interests through political parties or interest groups that typically employ one-way conventional communication to mobilize supporters
The “Actualizing” Citizen (Bennett 2008) • Diminished sense of government obligation—higher sense of individual purpose • Voting is less meaningful than other, more personally defined acts such as consumerism, community volunteering, or transnational activism • Mistrust of media and politicians is reinforced by negative mass media environment. • Favors loose networks of community action—often established or sustained through friendships and peer relations and thin social ties maintained by interactive information technologies
Some Key Questions for Investigation: • What are the strategies that SL/CE educators can employ to: • Foster the development of virtual spaces for students to create and engage in 'authentic' civic dialogue? AND • focus their attention to key issues, realities, and knowledge areas that lay outside of Gen Y, Z preferences but which may be essential to their civic development?
Some Key Questions-con’t: • What do we (practitioner-scholars) need to learn in order to be a partner with students in this process? • Where do community residents and partners fit into these spaces?
Styles of Citizenship (Lance Bennett 2008) Dutiful Actualizing • Sense of obligation to participate in government-centered activities • Voting as the core democratic act, supported by surrounding knowledge and contact with government • Mass media news informs about issues and government • Joins civil society organizations and/or expresses interests through political parties or interest groups that typically employ one-way conventional communication to mobilize supporters • Diminished sense of government obligation—higher sense of individual purpose • Voting is less meaningful than other, more personally defined acts such as consumerism, community volunteering, or transnational activism • Mistrust of media and politicians is reinforced by negative mass media environment. • Favors loose networks of community action—often established or sustained through friendships and peer relations and thin social ties maintained by interactive information technologies