Difference between revisions of "Quantitative"
From Dissertation in Progress
Lombanaphd (Talk | contribs) |
Lombanaphd (Talk | contribs) |
||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
* [[Children, Media, and Race: Media Use Among White, Black, Hispanic, and Asian American Children]] (Northwestern, 2011) | * [[Children, Media, and Race: Media Use Among White, Black, Hispanic, and Asian American Children]] (Northwestern, 2011) | ||
− | + | Informative secondary quantitative data. Doesn't answer deeper, more important questions pertaining to Hispanic-Latino families and digital media use. | |
== Technology use and American Youth == | == Technology use and American Youth == |
Revision as of 16:58, 10 September 2013
I draw from secondary quantitative data on Latino population from the Census Bureau , Civic Rights Data Collection, the Pew Hispanic Center, the Kaiser Family Foundation, the Northwestern University Center on Media and Human Development
Latino/Hispanics and Technology
- Closing the Digital Divide: Latinos and Technology Adoption (2013, PHC)
- Latinos and Digital Technology (PHC, 2011)
- The Latino Digital Divide: The Native Born versus The Foreign Born (PHC, 2010)
- Children, Media, and Race: Media Use Among White, Black, Hispanic, and Asian American Children (Northwestern, 2011)
Informative secondary quantitative data. Doesn't answer deeper, more important questions pertaining to Hispanic-Latino families and digital media use.
Technology use and American Youth
- GENERATION M2 Media in the Lives of 8- to 18-Year-Olds (2010)
- Teens, Social Media, and Privacy (PEW, Berkman, 2013)
- Teens and Technology (PEW, Berkman 2013)
- How Teens Do Research in the Digital World (PEW, 2012)
- Social Media and Young Adults (PEW 2010)
- Teen Content Creators and Consumers (PEW, 2005)
- The Digital Disconnect: The widening gap between internet-savvy students and their schools (PEW, 2002)
- Trend Data American teens : activities online (PEw, 2009-2011)