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dc.contributor.advisorBeavis, Catherine
dc.contributor.authorHannaford, Jeanette Mary
dc.date.accessioned2018-01-23T02:21:55Z
dc.date.available2018-01-23T02:21:55Z
dc.date.issued2015
dc.identifier.doi10.25904/1912/3119
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10072/365728
dc.description.abstractThis research explores the experiences of children living globally mobile lives. The children live in families where one or more parents are highly skilled professionals and mobility is an ever-present element of their employment. Understandings around the concept of ‘home’ can be wide-ranging for these children. A European International School is the site of the research. The majority of the students in the school are living outside of their ‘birth’ nation and culture, and may therefore be classified as ‘Third Culture Kids’ (Useem, Useem, & Donoghue, 1964). Third Culture Kids (TCKs) are loosely defined as children who do not live in their country of origin, and are foreigners in the countries in which they reside. As such, these children are members of an imaginary ‘third culture’ of those with similar lifestyles (Pollock & Reken, 2009; Useem et al. 1964). A sociocultural-new literacies paradigm provides a generative approach for exploration of the multiple dimensions of these children’s lives in the 21st century. The research compares and contrasts the children’s different forms of play involving digital technologies, including social connectivity facilitated through playful uses of technology. In many regards, for children whose lives are defined by the fact that they continually move away from existing social environments, new technologies have had extraordinary consequences. Computers and the Internet are significant components of most of these children’s out-of-school worlds, and are enjoyed in both private and social environments. The role of technologies in these children’s school lives is also considered. This dissertation particularly focuses on the ways in which identities, online and offline worlds, everyday life and literacies and the worlds of school, interact in the lives of these young people.
dc.languageEnglish
dc.publisherGriffith University
dc.publisher.placeBrisbane
dc.rights.copyrightThe author owns the copyright in this thesis, unless stated otherwise.
dc.subject.keywordsThird Culture Kids
dc.subject.keywordsChildren of expatriots
dc.subject.keywords(im)materialities framework
dc.titleTechnology, Home and Gender: The Literacies of Third Culture Kids
dc.typeGriffith thesis
gro.facultyArts, Education and Law
gro.rights.copyrightThe author owns the copyright in this thesis, unless stated otherwise.
gro.hasfulltextFull Text
dc.contributor.otheradvisorRowan, Leonie
dc.rights.accessRightsPublic
gro.identifier.gurtIDgu1478578690632
gro.source.ADTshelfnoADT0
gro.source.GURTshelfnoGURT
gro.thesis.degreelevelThesis (PhD Doctorate)
gro.thesis.degreeprogramDoctor of Philosophy (PhD)
gro.departmentSchool of Education and Professional Studies
gro.griffith.authorHannaford, Jeanette Mary


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