BSc (Hons) Sociology
Bachelor's Degree
Status | Complete |
---|---|
Part Time | No |
Years | 2006 |
BSc (Hons) Sociology
Bachelor's Degree
Status Complete Part Time No Years 2006
MSc Multimedia and Interactive Systems
Master's Degree
Status Complete Years 2008 Project Title Individual Differences in Interactive Systems Usage
MSc Sociology
Master's Degree
Status Complete Part Time No Years 2007 Project Title Unhealthy Medical Relations
PG Cert Teaching and Learning in Higher Education
Postgraduate Certificate
Status Complete Years 2012 Project Title Application of Social Networking Sites (SNSs) within Higher Education context
PhD Computing
Doctorate
Status Complete Part Time No Years 2016 Project Title Learning to cope with non-discretionary use of digital technologies Project Description The thesis describes an investigation into how people learn to cope with non-discretionary use of digital technologies. This includes circumstances when a prospective technology consumer is not presented with the choice whether or not to engage, or the choice comes with negative consequences that outweigh his or her reluctance to interact with the system.
The thesis aims to develop an engaged, first hand, context dependent account of this phenomenon, by adopting phenomenology to understand subjective meanings and individual outlooks of the people involved. Ethnographic investigations are used to understand peoples’ everyday practices, and hermeneutics is applied as a means of interpretation. The research employed qualitative methods of data gathering that enabled an involved investigation, as well as Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis, content analysis and thematic analysis, to make sense of gathered information.
Two major empirical studies were carried out in order to investigate the phenomena surrounding people coping with non-discretionary use of digital technologies. Students Coping with Obligatory University Technologies (SCOUT), was an ethnographic account of 75 undergraduates, learning to use business simulation software. “Coping in the Wild” was a bricolage involving three different methods, including a longitudinal ethnographical study of a novice user, an extensive semi-structured interview with a self-proclaimed technology “expert” and lastly, a thematic analysis of user generated online resources.
The final outcome of the thesis is a model of how people learn to cope with non-discretionary use of digital technologies. The model consists of main components (Conditions, Actions and Attitudes) and associated themes (Thrownness, Praxis, Motivation and Social Aspects). The relationships between different components and themes results in number of strategies employed by the users.
The thesis concludes with areas of further work that could be undertaken based on this model of coping.Awarding Institution Edinburgh Napier University Second Supervisor Michael Smyth
About Edinburgh Napier Research Repository
Administrator e-mail: repository@napier.ac.uk
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Apache License Version 2.0 (http://www.apache.org/licenses/)
SIL OFL 1.1 (http://scripts.sil.org/OFL)
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CC BY 3.0 ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/)
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