dc.creatorHernández Orellana, Marisol
dc.creatorPérez Garcias, Adolfina
dc.creatorRoco Videla, Ángel
dc.date2021-12-27T23:31:58Z
dc.date2021-12-27T23:31:58Z
dc.date2021
dc.identifierFuture Internet, Volume 13, Issue 3, 2021, 74
dc.identifier1999-5903
dc.identifierhttp://repositoriodigital.ucsc.cl/handle/25022009/2573
dc.identifier10.3390/fi13030074
dc.descriptionArtículo de publicación SCOPUS
dc.descriptionAt present, our online activity is almost constant, either producing information or consuming it, both for the social and academic fields. The spaces in which people move and travel every day, innocently divided between the face-to-face and the virtual, affect the way we communicate and perceive ourselves. In this document, a characterization of the academic digital identity of Chilean university students is proposed and an invitation to teachers to redefine learning spaces is made, allowing integrating all those technological tools that the student actually uses. This study was developed within the logic of pragmatism based on mixed methodology, non-experimental design, and a descriptive–quantitative cross-sectional approach. A non-probabilistic sample was made up of 509 students, who participated voluntarily with an online questionnaire. The Stata Version-14 program was used, applying the Mann–Whitney–Wilcoxon and Kruskal–Wallis U tests. To develop characterizations, a conglomerate analysis was performed with a hierarchical dissociative method. In general, Chilean university students are highly truthful on the Internet without making significant differences between face-to-face and digital interactions, with low awareness of their ID, being easily recognizable on the Web. Regarding their educational process, they manage it with analogical/face-to-face mixing formal and informal technological tools to optimize their learning process. These students manifest a hybrid academic digital identity, without gender difference in the deployment of their PLEs, but maintaining stereotypical gender behaviors in the construction of their digital identity on the Web, which shows a human-technological development similar to that of young Asians and Europeans.
dc.languageen
dc.publisherMDPI
dc.sourcehttps://doi.org/10.3390/fi13030074
dc.subjectDigital identity
dc.subjectPLE
dc.subjectAwareness of digital identity
dc.subjectAcademic digital identity
dc.subjectStereotypical behaviors
dc.titleCharacterization of the digital identity of Chilean university students considering their personal learning environments
dc.typeArticle


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