Celia Hannon
Senior Researcher
Celia Hannon joined Demos as a researcher in 2005. Her research interests include gender, childhood, new media and public space.
"media"
Celia Hannon has 6 items tagged with this theme. Find more on this theme : » show items from across the site
- Dr Joolz: Snapshotz on Life: Flickr in the classroom Dr Joolz: Snapshotz on Life: Flickr in the classroom from : celiahannon 21st July 2006
- Joining up the dots The more we find about young people's changing relationship with digital media the more questions this raises about their future as students and employees. Just as some schools find it difficult to capitalise on the creative and technological skills of many of their pupils, so organisations risk overlooking the new skills of young graduates. As the recent Demos publication Working Progress demonstrated, employers think new graduates are arriving without with the skills needed to navigate the... from : celiahannon 30th August 2006
- TV gets left behind as kids head for the web A new survey has shown that two thirds of kids spend more time online than watching TV. More than half use Social Networking sites every week. from : celiahannon 1st September 2006
- Online TV news update for Young Europeans Online TV news update for Young Europeans from : celiahannon 6th March 2008
- Pan European Youth and media Julian Rolfe, Manager, Planet Edge, Synovate, commented: "The findings from the study demonstrate that with an increasing lack of faith in the education system and employment market, young people across Europe are investing more and more of their time and energy in their leisure activities in order to give themselves a sense of identity and belonging. from : celiahannon 27th March 2008
- Anthropology of ourselves Having just been reminded of the 'mass observation' project, founded back in 1937, I was struck by how the same impulses drive us to collect and document everyday life now. The difference now is simply in the tools we use. The Mass Observation website describes how the original project worked, and it sounds like a weighty undertaking: 'In Bolton, a team of paid investigators went into a variety of public situations: meetings, religious occasions, sporting and leisure activities, in the... from : celiahannon 31st March 2008
