In recent years, an increasing interest for civic education has been observed in many countries around the world. At the same time, the 21st century has witnessed the emergence of a new form of technologically mediated citizenship that finds in social networks and other digital spaces a channel of expression that is especially accessible to young generations, who have grown up in a hybrid context and in a school concerned with digital literacy. This paper analyzes the role of cyberspace in civic participation of young people in the Community of Madrid. It is used a qualitative methodology through focus groups, which were applied in four different schools in different geographical areas with unequal socioeconomic status. 43 students of secondary education, compulsory and non-compulsory, formed the sample. Findings from the focus groups indicate that participants have a feeling of lack of consideration and attention to the possibilities of civic participation of young people; the globalizing and homogenizing nature of the internet; a remarkable critical awareness in adolescents of the risks of the digital environment, linked to the concept of digital citizenship; the perception of complementarity between physical and virtual spaces; the positive appreciation of the instantaneousness of cyberspace, in comparison to other media; the risk that a more reproductive than creative digital civic participation replaces the physical presence in public spaces, with lethargic effects on the civic conscience of young people; the scarce relevance of official technological channels; and the growing contact with other contexts, that favours an intercultural globalization.
CITATION STYLE
Fuentes, J. L., & Belando-Montoro, M. R. (2022). Social networks and other digital channels as civic participation means: a qualitative study of madrilean youth. Foro de Educacion, 20(1), 39–63. https://doi.org/10.14516/FDE.926
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