The Good Play Project is a research and educational initiative focused on the ethical contours of young people’s digital lives. The research initially involved qualitative interviews with teens, tweens, young adults, parents and teachers about ethical issues around online identity, privacy, property, and speech. A related project called Developing Minds and Digital Media - led by Howard Gardner and
Katie Davis (University of Washington) - explored how youth navigate identity, intimacy, and imagination in the digital era. These two projects resulted in numerous articles and several books, including
Disconnected: Youth, New Media, and the Ethics Gap (2014, The MIT Press),
The App Generation (2013, Yale University Press), and
Young People, Ethics, and the New Digital Media (2009, The MIT Press).
In 2017, the Good Play project entered a new phase of research. Led by Carrie James, Emily Weinstein, and Howard Gardner, we are probing the personal, moral, ethical, and civic dilemmas of tweens’ and teens’ digital lives today, with a particular focus on pedagogical approaches to support digital citizenship effectively. The research builds on the Good Project’s prior studies with a series of mixed methods investigations, including surveys, observations, experiments, and interviews.