As I started my investigation into the first article, I reflected on the subject I had chosen for my investigation, and I instantly came to the conclusion that I should have picked something else. I chose "digital citizenship" because I thought it would be a simple subject to discuss, however I was incorrect about that. Instead, digital citizenship is a broad concept that can be interpreted in a number of different ways by a variety of different groups. Additionally, digital citizenship is not equally distributed due to digital divides all over the world.
I started out by searching for information in various internet databases, such as ERIC, EBSCO, and Google Scholar. The search term "digital citizenship" turned up thousands of articles but adding the phrase "trends in higher education" and narrowing the results to only those that were "peer reviewed" produced very few results. I sat down for a few hours with the intention of locating an article of high quality.
When I finally located the piece of writing that I was interested in analyzing, I took some notes on the most important features of the source that I had chosen and arranged them in a manner that made sense to me.
The primary subject of the piece that I critiqued came up right away. Following that, two further subtopics were recognized, and from them, five overarching themes were derived. It has just recently dawned on me how one may represent all of this information on a literature map.
My chosen paper and literature review are provided below.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1NxtPte9iyQU0Yq6Zccypd0FIdLYQ-XtqLC83cyCp5q0/edit?usp=sharing
https://docs.google.com/document/d/10hpIW5Tk76vAUyuASUWv4aoyEr6KAc0StXHlaX6OoJU/edit?usp=sharing
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