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Many other uses can be problematic, such as disrespecting others, the privacy of teachers, education staff or other students. So-called “cyberbullying” situations via Web 2.0 tools are also problems that educators have to deal with (messages or video broadcasting via personalized and live channels on Snapchat or Periscope, for example). The digital practices of young people are all the more complex as they mix creativity and skills development, intimacy and self-exposure. What these multidisciplinary works have in common is that they seek to identify what digital technology does to the individual and to society in different contexts (educational, professional, political, etc.). The objective of this book is to compare the discourses on risk with the practices and representations of the actors in different professional fields and in the educational field, and subsequently, to explain their stakes in a digital context.
Our assumption is that individuals are armed with resilience17 in a changing world. The perception of digital risks can be a resource or a lever to develop a critical culture in a digital context18. The contributions in this book present the means we have today to move from risk perception to risk information, from information to knowledge, and from knowledge to action19. They will be of particular interest to teachers, trainers, mediators, information and media professionals.
The book is divided into three sections. The first section deals with the perception of risks in education and shows how the Internet currently constitutes an ecosystem in which the relationship between the teacher and their students is inevitably positioned.
Chapter 1 shows the impact of alarmist discourses on educational practices through a study on the representations of digital risks among young teachers. These discourses seem to have an important resonance with teachers when they start their career and can dissuade them from implementing any digital practice at school with students.
Chapter 2 focuses on adolescents’ perceptions of fake news. The study highlights variations in reflexivity towards critical evaluation of sources and disinformation across different age groups of students.
Chapter 3 aims to better understand the pedagogical positions and choices of teachers, particularly in the area of Media and Information Literacy. Based on a survey conducted among teachers, the representations and non-formal practices identified lead the author to advocate for a cultural approach to digital education in professional training.
The second section deals with informational risks, as well as economic and social risks in professional environments. It focuses on the practices used to deal with these situations.
In Chapter 4, the authors look at information risk from the point of view of business leaders. They show that this notion is broader than digital or computer risk, which is restricted to digital media. The risks mentioned by managers in the context of their security policy include many informational risks linked to other media.
Chapter 5 highlights the difficulties faced by organizations in Cameroon in dealing with the risks of scams and fraud in the use of cell phones by the population. Despite attempts at prevention by institutional organizations and cell phone operators, users suffer from an information deficit and the lack of means of action is not conducive to optimal mediation of these risks.
The third section looks back at the practices and mediations around digital risks in education. In particular, it examines the contribution of Media and Information Literacy, as implemented in schools in France.
Chapter 6 shows that the notion of risk is often the starting point for pedagogical practices concerning digital uses and appears to be deeply rooted in the teachers’ vision of information culture. Although school learning practices are still quite far removed from the private sphere, we can see that teachers in the field are concerned with developing knowledge in students that they can transfer from one context of use to another.
Finally, Chapter 7 compares the discourse of teachers in primary education with institutional texts concerning Media and Information Literacy. This comparison shows that the development of digital culture advocated in institutional texts remains a vague subject for primary school teachers. Beyond the operational approach to the use of digital tools, it is confirmed that primary school teachers lack training in the cultural approach to the web and its media.
1 Introduction written by Camille CAPELLE.
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