A living journals approach for the remote study of young children's digital practices in Azerbaijan

被引:6
|
作者
Savadova, Sabina [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Edinburgh, Holyrood Rd, Edinburgh EH8 8AQ, Midlothian, Scotland
来源
GLOBAL STUDIES OF CHILDHOOD | 2023年 / 13卷 / 01期
关键词
Azerbaijan; living journals method; visual method; young children; digital media; ETHNOGRAPHY;
D O I
10.1177/20436106211034179
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
This article proposes the living journals method for remotely studying participants, elevating participant agency in the data generation process and minimising or completely removing the need for a researcher to be physically present in the field. Employing this method, the paper describes how the method was used to explore 5-year-old children's digital practices in five families in Azerbaijan. Mothers were assigned as 'proxy' researchers to generate the data following prompts sent through a smartphone application. Mothers' answers were used to create journals, and subsequently, fathers separately, and mothers and children together were requested to interpret their own journals and those of other participant children. Allowing other families to comment on one another's journals further revealed their attitudes towards using digital technologies and enriched the data, emphasising its multivocality and metatextuality. The article describes the living journals method in detail, highlighting its affordances for researchers to generate data from a distance in other contexts. The article also discusses the methodological and empirical contribution of the method to this study about young children's engagements with digital media at home. By decentring the researcher in the data generation process, the method allows researchers to generate both visually and textually complex and rich data. The visual and personal nature of the method goes beyond text-based research accounts to bring the data to life, allowing the researcher to generate multimodal, multivocal, metatextual and multifunctional data.
引用
收藏
页码:64 / 78
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Young children's experiences of living an everyday life with cancer - A three year interview study
    Darcy, Laura
    Enskar, Karin
    Bjork, Maria
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ONCOLOGY NURSING, 2019, 39 : 1 - 9
  • [32] Determinants of infants and young children feeding practices among mothers living in Saudi Arabia: a cross-sectional study
    Alsada, Fatimah
    Sebastian, Tunny
    Alzayer, Zainab
    Alabbas, Hawraa
    Alhaddad, Narjis
    Abu Shahin, Hawraa
    Alghamdi, Atheer
    Alhmly, Haya F.
    Baassiri, Malek J.
    Alkhalifa, Bedour
    Mutoro, Antonina N.
    Alyahya, Wesam A.
    BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2025, 25 (01)
  • [33] Engagement and Immersion in Digital Play: Supporting Young Children's Digital Wellbeing
    Johnston, Kelly
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2021, 18 (19)
  • [35] Children's and Young People's Food Practices in Contexts of Poverty and Inequality
    Wills, Wendy J.
    O'Connell, Rebecca
    CHILDREN & SOCIETY, 2018, 32 (03) : 169 - 173
  • [36] Living with a powered wheelchair: exploring children's and young people's experiences
    Gudgeon, S.
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY, 2013, 76 : 54 - 54
  • [37] Living with a powered wheelchair: exploring children's and young people's experiences
    Gudgeon, Sue
    Kirk, Susan
    DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION-ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGY, 2015, 10 (02) : 118 - 125
  • [38] The Experiences of Young People Living With Cancer in Regional and Remote Australia: A Qualitative Study
    Sariman, Jodi A.
    Harris, Nonie M.
    Harvey, Desley
    Sansom-Daly, Ursula M.
    AUSTRALIAN SOCIAL WORK, 2022, 75 (02) : 205 - 218
  • [39] DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES, LEARNING AND EDUCATION: PRACTICES AND PERCEPTIONS OF YOUNG CHILDREN (UNDER 8) AND THEIR PARENTS
    Brito, Rita
    Dias, Patricia
    ENSAYOS-REVISTA DE LA FACULTAD DE EDUCACION DE ALBACETE, 2016, 31 (02): : 23 - 40
  • [40] Narrative in young children's digital art-making
    Sakr, Mona
    Connelly, Vince
    Wild, Mary
    JOURNAL OF EARLY CHILDHOOD LITERACY, 2016, 16 (03) : 289 - 310