DOI: 10.17275/per.23.85.10.5 ISSN:
An Investigation into the Levels of Digital Parenting, Digital Literacy, and Digital Data Security Awareness among Parents and Teachers in Early Childhood Education
Emrah AKMAN, Önder İDİL, Recep ÇAKIR - Developmental and Educational Psychology
- Education
It is of great importance for teachers, students, and parents, who are among the main stakeholders in education, to understand concepts such as digital parenting, digital literacy, and digital information security awareness in that we live in a digital age, and it seems that we will never go back. The purpose of this research is to examine the levels of digital parenting attitudes of preschool parents, and the levels of digital literacy and digital data security awareness of preschool teachers and parents, and then to investigate whether these variables show general relationships with change. Designed as quantitative research, this is a correlational study. We recruited a total of 410 participants from preschool teachers and preschool parents. We used a personal information form, Digital Parenting Attitude Scale, Digital Literacy Scale, and Digital Data Security Awareness Scale as data collection instruments. Our results show that preschool teachers' digital literacy and digital data security awareness levels are higher than those of preschool parents. There is evidence that there was a statistically significant difference between digital literacy and digital data security awareness. Accordingly, we recommend that teachers should cooperate with parents on digital literacy and digital data security awareness. Further, school principals should make their greatest efforts to make this cooperation sustainable. Several activities should be conducted to boost digital literacy levels of both parents and students, and thereby increasing their digital data security awareness.
More from our Archive
-
DOI: 10.1002/pits.23061 2023
Are schools doing enough? An exploration of how primary schools in England support the well‐being of their teachers William Cotson, Lisa E. Kim
-
DOI: 10.1002/pits.23067 2023
Social anxiety and phubbing: The mediating role of problematic social networking and the moderating role of family socioeconomic status Xiaoyuan Chu, Yuxin Chen, Alafate Litifu, Yang Zhou, Xiaochun Xie, Xinyi Wei, Li Lei
-
DOI: 10.1002/pits.23069 2023
Sociopsychological determinants of COVID‐19 vaccine acceptance and hesitancy among the students' of higher secondary schools in rural Bangladesh: A cross‐sectional study Debendra Nath Roy, Ekramul Islam, Md. Mohabbot Hossen, Nowrin Ferdiousi, Md. Shah Azam
-
DOI: 10.1111/papt.12305 2023
A systematic review of service user’s experience of cognitive analytic therapy (CAT) Nadia Balmain, Yvonne Melia, Helen Dent, Karen Smith
-
DOI: 10.1111/papt.12326 2023
Experiences of receiving cognitive analytic therapy for those with complex secondary care mental health difficulties Nadia Balmain, Yvonne Melia, Christopher John, Helen Dent, Karen Smith
-
DOI: 10.1111/papt.12311 2023
The torchlight model of mapping in cognitive analytic therapy (CAT) reformulation: A qualitative investigation Steve Jefferis, Zara Fantarrow, Lynne Johnston
-
DOI: 10.1111/apps.12499 2023
What happens at work does not always stay at work: Daily job crafting and detachment among colleagues Ana Isabel Sanz‐Vergel, Karina Nielsen, Alfredo Rodríguez‐Muñoz, Mirko Antino
-
DOI: 10.1177/21676968231200094 2023
An Exploration of Healthy and Unhealthy Relationships Experienced by Emerging Adults During the Covid-19 Lockdowns in England Emily Setty, Emma Dobson
-
DOI: 10.1177/09636625231190743 2023
Media framings of the role of genomics in “addiction” in the United States from 2015 to 2019: Individualized risk, biomedical expertise, and the limits of destigmatization Katherine Hendy
-
DOI: 10.1002/jocb.611 2023
An Experimental Comparison of Analogy Representation Effects on Creative Outcomes Georgios Koronis, Hernan Casakin, Arlindo Silva