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Digital Natives

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Digital Natives
Marc Prensky
Digital Natives Digital Immigrants
©2001 Marc Prensky
_____________________________________________________________________________

Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants
By Marc Prensky
From On the Horizon (NCB University Press, Vol. 9 No. 5, October 2001)
© 2001 Marc Prensky

It is amazing to me how in all the hoopla and debate these days about the decline of education in the US we ignore the most fundamental of its causes. Our students have changed radically. Today’s students are no longer the people our educational system was designed to teach.
Today’s students have not just changed incrementally from those of the past, nor simply changed their slang, clothes, body adornments, or styles, as has happened between generations previously. A really big discontinuity has taken place. One might even call it a “singularity” – an event which changes things so fundamentally that there is absolutely no going back. This so-called “singularity” is the arrival and rapid dissemination of digital technology in the last decades of the 20th century.
Today’s students – K through college – represent the first generations to grow up with this new technology. They have spent their entire lives surrounded by and using computers, videogames, digital music players, video cams, cell phones, and all the other toys and tools of the digital age. Today’s average college grads have spent less than
5,000 hours of their lives reading, but over 10,000 hours playing video games (not to mention 20,000 hours watching TV). Computer games, email, the Internet, cell phones and instant messaging are integral parts of their lives.
It is now clear that as a result of this ubiquitous environment and the sheer volume of their interaction with it, today’s students think and process information fundamentally differently from their predecessors. These differences go far further and deeper than most educators suspect or realize. “Different kinds of experiences lead to



Cited: in Inferential Focus Briefing, September 30, 1997. 10. Dr. Mark Jude Tramano of Harvard. Reported in USA Today December 10, 1998. 11. Newsweek, January 1, 2000. 12. They include Alexandr Romanovich Luria (1902-1977), Soviet pioneer in neuropsychology, author of The Human Brain and Psychological Processes (1963), and, more recently, Dr 13. Quoted in Erica Goode, “How Culture Molds Habits of Thought,” New York Times, August 8, 2000. 14. John T. Bruer, The Myth of the First Three Years, The Free Press, 1999, p. 155. Online Community, May 27, 2000. 17. Time, July 5, 1999. 18. The Economist, December 6, 1997. 19. Kathleen Baynes, neurology researcher, University of California – Davis, quoted in Robert Lee Hotz “In Art of Language, the Brain Matters “ Los Angeles Times, October 18, 1998. 20. Dr. Michael S. Gazzaniga, neuroscientist at Dartmouth College quoted in Robert Lee Hotz “In Art of Language, the Brain Matters “ Los Angeles Times, October 18, 1998. 22. Peter Moore, Inferential Focus Briefing, September 30, 1997. 24. Patricia Marks Greenfield, Mind and Media, The Effects of Television, Video Games and Computers, Harvard University Press, 1984. 26. Graesser, A.C., & Person, N.K. (1994) “Question asking during tutoring,”. American Educational Research Journal, 31, 104-107. 27. Elizabeth Lorch, psychologist, Amherst College, quoted in Malcolm Gladwell, The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference, Little Brown & Company, 2000, p Association, Jerusalem, 1998.

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