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Seminar.net - International journal of media, technology and lifelong learning 
Vol. 11 – Issue 2 – 2015 

 
 
 
The Digital Competences and Agency of Older 
People Living in Rural Villages in Finnish Lapland 
 

Päivi Rasi 
Faculty of Education, Centre for Media Pedagogy 
University of Lapland 
Email: paivi.rasi@ulapland.fi  

Arja Kilpeläinen 
Faculty of Social Sciences 
University of Lapland 
Email: arja.kilpelainen@ulapland.f  

Abstract 
Older people’s digital competencies are a means to minimise their possible 
risks for being excluded from society. Therefore, the research in this field 
needs to be strengthened. This paper examines the digital competences and 
agency of older people who live in remote rural villages in Finnish Lapland. 
We argue that older people’s agency is the key factor that keeps them included 
in contemporary society. Hence, our theoretical viewpoint rests on the theory 
of the modalities of agency. Our data consist of three focus group interviews 
that were conducted in small, remote villages during the spring of 2015. We 
analysed our data deductively, and the results showed that elderly villagers 
interpret their digital competencies through their personal needs and desires. 
History, the present and the future are intertwined in the villagers’ 
conceptions. Our respondents’ digital competencies are diverse; older people 
living in villages are not a homogenous group. Based on our results, we argue 
that digital competence is very much a distributed competence of elderly 
dyads, families with three generations and informal networks of villagers and 
that it should not, therefore, be assessed solely as an individual characteristic.  
 

Keywords: older people’s digital competence, agency, media agency, media 
literacy 
 

Introduction 
This paper presents a study that focuses on the digital competences and 
agency of older Finnish people who live in remote rural villages in Finnish 

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Lapland. In Finland, people in the 64–89 age group use the Internet 
substantially less than those in younger age groups. Furthermore, 25% of 
people in the 64–75 age group report having never used the Internet. The 
individual’s use or non-use of the Internet is also related to the area in which 
he or she lives, and older people who live in rural areas use the Internet less 
than city dwellers (Official Statistics of Finland, 2015).  
 
Older people’s non-use or low use of the Internet has raised concerns about 
their possible risks for being excluded from services related to education, well-
being, health, social security, welfare, communication and participation in the 
digitalised society. Accordingly, national European strategies have prioritised 
the need to promote older people’s access to the Internet and the need to 
better understand their specific needs in terms of, for example, digital 
competence-related training and support services (Sourbati, 2009). In recent 
years, public authorities and international organisations have launched a 
significant number of media literacy initiatives aimed at older people (Abad, 
2014).  
 
The concept of digital competence (Ferrari, 2013) that is applied in this 
research overlaps with the concept of media literacy. Therefore, in this paper, 
we present a discussion and previous research that deals with both concepts. 
Digital competence, broadly defined, refers to “the confident, critical and 
creative use of ICT to achieve goals related to work, employability, learning, 
leisure, inclusion, and/or or participation in society” (Punie, 2013, p. 2), 
whereas according to, for example, Ofcom (2006, p. 10), media literacy is “the 
ability to access, understand and create communications in a variety of 
contexts” (cf. Aufderheide, 1997). The concept of digital competence has been 
assessed as being narrower and more instrumental in its focus compared to 
the concept of media literacy, which is understood as being more critical (see, 
e.g., Gutiérrez & Tyner, 2012). 
 
The concepts of digital competence and media literacy underscore the crucial 
meaning of ICT- and media-related competences in present-day society. The 
European Commission (2010) has acknowledged digital competence as one of 
the eight key competences for lifelong learning and participation in 
increasingly digitalised societies. The academic literature on media education 
and media literacy identifies the following three key purposes to which media 
literacy contributes: (a) democracy, participation and active citizenship; (b) 
the knowledge economy, competitiveness and choice and (c) lifelong learning, 
cultural expression and personal fulfilment (Livingstone, Van Couvering, & 
Thumim, 2005, p. 7). The use of ICTs in general has been considered an 
opportunity to improve older people’s living conditions, to strengthen their 
social community and to facilitate their everyday lives in rural areas 
(Kilpeläinen & Seppänen, 2014; Kilpeläinen, 2014).  
 

Digital Competences of Older People 
 
The concept of digital competence refers to a complex set of knowledge, skills 
and attitudes needed to participate in digital societies (Ferrari, 2013, p. 11). In 
this paper, we use the definition of digital competence provided by the 
European Commission’s Joint Research Centre’s Institute for Prospective 
Technological Studies, which summarises the areas of digital competence as 
follows (Ferrari, 2013): 
 

Information: Identify, locate, retrieve, store, organise and analyse 
digital information, judging its relevance and purpose.  
Communication: Communicate in digital environments, share 
resources through online tools, link with others and collaborate 



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through digital tools; interact with and participate in communities and 
networks; cross-cultural awareness. 
Content-creation: Create and edit new content from word 
processing to images and video; integrate and re-elaborate previous 
knowledge and content; produce creative expressions, media outputs 
and programming; deal with and apply intellectual property rights and 
licences.  
Safety: Personal protection, data protection, digital identity 
protection, security measures, safe and sustainable use.  
Problem-solving: Identify digital needs and resources, make 
informed decisions on the most appropriate digital tools according to 
the purpose and need, solve conceptual problems through digital 
means, creatively use technologies, solve technical problems, update 
own and others’ competence. 

  
Substantially less research has been conducted on the media literacy and 
media education of adults and older adults compared to children and youth 
(Dennis, 2004; Hakkarainen, Hyvönen, Luksua, & Leinonen, 2009; 
Livingstone, Van Couvering, & Thumim, 2005; Ofcom, 2006; Tisdell, Stuckey, 
& Thompson, 2007). However, the existing research suggests that adults may 
lack the necessary skills to critically evaluate the point of view from which 
information is presented (Livingstone, Van Couvering, & Thumim, 2005). Of 
the three aspects of media literacy (i.e. access, understanding and creation), 
creation has been the most under-researched (Livingstone, Van Couvering, & 
Thumim, 2005). 
 
In the United Kingdom (UK), Ofcom’s (2006) report on media literacy 
amongst people aged 65 or older indicated that the breadth of their Internet 
use was around one-tenth of the maximum potential. The report illustrated 
much lower levels of media literacy for older people compared to UK adults as 
a whole. This was especially the case with regard to older people’s volume of 
Internet usage and their competence in digital tasks (e.g. blocking computer 
viruses or e-mail spam and listening to the radio over the Internet). Compared 
to adults, older people have reported less interest in learning more about 
Internet technologies and use. Their preferred method of learning about 
digital technologies, the Internet included, is through friends and family, 
compared to other methods, such as reading the manual/instructions, trial 
and error on their own, finding out from the supplier/store, or going to a 
class/learning in a group. Conversely, previous research has identified the 
following key enablers of adult media literacy (see Livingstone, Van Couvering, 
& Thumim, 2005): self-efficacy (skills and confidence in using new media 
technologies), social support networks and family composition—especially 
having children in the household.  
 

Modalities of Agency as a Theoretical Approach 
In this study, we take a holistic approach to older people’s digital competences 
and explore these from the viewpoint of the theory of modalities of agency. 
This theory, which was formulated in Finland by Jyrki Jyrkämä, draws on the 
theories of agency, especially in sociology and aging research, as well as on the 
theoretical ideas of the French semiotician Julien Greimas and his followers 
(Jyrkämä, 2008). Jyrkämä argues that the behaviour of humans is the result of 
the dynamic interaction of the modalities of agency: knowing how to, being 
able to, having to, having the opportunity to, wanting to and feeling. 
Knowing how to refers to the enduring knowledge and skills that a person has 
acquired during his or her life course or will acquire in the future. Being able 
to primarily entails an individual’s physical and mental abilities, which vary 
from situation to situation and change throughout the course of aging. Having 
to entails physical, social normative and moral barriers, necessities and 



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constraints. Conversely, having to encompasses the opportunities that various 
situations provide. Wanting to is related to motivation and to being motivated, 
as well as to volition, aims and goals. Feeling deals with the human tendency 
to evaluate and make value judgements, as well as to experience and associate 
emotions with things and situations. According to Jyrkämä (2008), “agency is 
something that originates from, takes shape, and is renewed within the 
intertwined and dynamic process of these modalities” (p. 195, author’s 
translation). Bandura (2001) stresses a person’s own experience of capability 
as the basics of agency. 
 
An example of the modalities of agency in the lives of older people is the 
automated teller machine (ATM) (Jyrkämä, 2008, pp. 195–96). The user of an 
ATM is required to know how to and be able to operate the machine. Various 
kinds of wanting to may be related to its use: Whereas one person wants to 
learn how to use the ATM, another does not, and still another person asks a 
more skilful and able grandchild to accompany him or her to the ATM. A 
person may also give his or her bank card to his or her home help. Differences 
also exist in terms of the modality of having to, as there may be localities 
without ATMs. In terms of feeling, older people are known to appreciate more 
traditional, face-to-face forms of customer service at the bank. When looking 
at various everyday situations (e.g. using the ATM), different types of 
intertwined modality constellations can be discerned. A person may, for 
example, represent the following type: “I know how to, I want to, I am able to 
and I even like to use the ATM”, and another person may represent the 
following type: “I know how to, I am able to, but I don’t want to”.  
 
With regard to older people, the theory of modalities of agency is best seen as a 
heuristic viewpoint or framework that makes it possible for researchers to 
understand and analyse older people in their everyday life situations, 
including their interactions and positions with respect to services related to, 
for example, education, well-being, health, social security and welfare 
(Jyrkämä, 2008). Jyrkämä stated that for the researcher who is conducting 
research from the viewpoint of the modalities of agency, it is crucial for him or 
her to take into consideration the contextuality of agency, as well as its object 
orientation and its connectedness in terms of time, place and situation. In 
addition, the dynamic and interactional nature of agency is central to the 
framework.  
 
Lipponen (2007) reflected on the concept of media literacy through the 
frameworks of sociocultural learning theory and agency. He argues that 
instead of understanding media literacy as the generic knowledge and skills of 
individual people, we should think of it more in terms of situated and 
distributed literacy. Following this line of thought, understanding people’s 
media literacy requires understanding the situations and contexts within 
which they act. It is central to understand that a person learns to master, in 
particular, the tools of thinking and the action of the communities to which he 
or she belongs.  
  
Earlier researchers have verified that individual, cultural and societal 
conditions define the relationship between older people and the use of ICTs 
(Hakkarainen, 2012; Kilpeläinen & Seppänen, 2013; Rasi & O’Neil, 2014; 
Suopajärvi, 2014). In the case of older people’s Internet (non)use, digital 
competences (Ferrari, 2013) can be thought of as only one or two modalities of 
agency (i.e. knowing how to and wanting to) that explain whether and how 
older people use the Internet. However, for a more holistic understanding, we 
need to find out how all the modalities interact with each other. In previous 
research, older people’s non-use or low use of the Internet has been explained 
by factors and barriers that can also be examined from the viewpoint of 
modalities of agency. These include physical limitations (being able to); lack of 
perceived needs and benefits of use (wanting to); lack of relevance to everyday 
living and lifestyle (wanting to); lack of sufficient skills, information and 



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support (knowing how to) and negative emotions (feeling) toward the Internet 
(Abad, 2014; Hakkarainen, 2012; Hakkarainen & Hyvönen, 2010; Harwood, 
2007; Livingstone, Van Couvering, & Thumim, 2005; Quinn, 2014). However, 
research into how the factors interact with each other is still scarce 
(Livingstone, Van Couvering, & Thumim, 2005; Wagner, Hassanein, & Head, 
2010).  
 

Research Questions, Data and Analysis 
This paper reports the first phase of our research process. During this phase, 
we used the modalities of agency of knowing how to and having to (Jyrkämä, 
2008), and we formulated the following research questions: How do the 
respondents assess their digital competences and the need to enhance them? 
Do the respondents report feeling social or societal pressure to use the 
Internet? If so, how does this pressure manifest itself? 
 
To answer the research questions, we analysed the research data gathered 
through three focus group interviews with older people living in three small 
rural villages in Finnish Lapland. The use of a focus group interview makes it 
possible for participants to express their ideas in situ (Barbour, 2007). All the 
interviews (see Table 1) were conducted during the spring of 2015, and both 
authors of this paper were the interviewers. All the interviews were audio 
recorded with the respondents’ informed consent. The shortest interview 
lasted one hour, and the longest lasted for one hour and 39 minutes. The 
participants were both female and male. The preconditions to take part in the 
interview were the following: retired, living in a remote village, and either an 
Internet user or non-user. 
 
Table 1 Description of focus group interviews  

Focus 
group 
interviews 

Number of 
participants 
(female/male) 

 Age 
(years) 

Internet 
user/ 
non-
user  

Duration Number of 
transcribed 
text pages  

Int. one 3/3 62–86  4/2 1h 31 min 78 
Int. two 3/2 64–85  3/2 1h 2 min 84 
Int. three 5/0 67–84  4/1 1h 39 min 113 

 
Our aim was to generate discussion rather than to conduct interviews. In doing 
so, we wanted to produce interactive, shared and reciprocal knowledge 
(Kilpeläinen, 2012). The topics and parts of the questions used in the focus 
group interviews were specified in advance as follows: the respondents’ living 
history in the village, the benefits and disadvantages of living in the village, 
communality in the village, locality, Internet use or non-use in everyday life 
and digital competence.  
 
The audio data were first transcribed verbatim by a trainee in the second 
author’s faculty. The analytical approach can best be characterised as 
deductive. We read the transcripts individually to identify and mark interview 
passages in which the respondents talked about their Internet use, digital 
competences (Ferrari, 2013) and everyday lives in the village in terms of the 
selected modalities of agency—that is, knowing how to and having to 
(Jyrkämä, 2008). We then analysed and coded the data by writing notes on the 
printed transcripts, the unit of analysis being, at times, a word, a phrase, a 
sentence or a longer text passage. After completing our individual analyses, we 
compared and discussed our thoughts and codings in one data session. In the 
following sections, we will present and discuss our findings. All the extracts 
reported in this paper have been translated into English by the authors. 
 



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Results 

Digital Competences from a Time Perspective  

Digital competence has been acknowledged as one of the key competences for 
lifelong learning and participation in increasingly digitalised societies 
(European Commission, 2010). However, the data provide somewhat 
contradictory evidence regarding the important meaning of digital competence 
for the respondents’ present and future lives in remote rural villages. Giddens 
(1984, p. 35) identified three forms of time: short day-to-day time, lifelong 
time and institutional time. The first form is constantly changing, the middle 
one is relatively stable and the last one, which is related to the culture of 
action, changes the slowest. Applying Giddens’ categories, villagers described 
three types of time: personal time, village time and societal time. Their 
personal time has changed since retirement and during the time spent living in 
the villages. Village time can be interpreted as a timeline for actions at the 
village level—for example, annual or other periodically recurring common 
events. The last one—societal time—represents societal needs and changes, 
and it has impacts on village time and personal time. 
  
First, the villagers situated their everyday lives through their personal lives. 
The respondents enthusiastically told numerous stories about their past, as 
well as their present, in which digital technologies and, accordingly, digital 
competence had no role. Within their life course, digital technologies were 
viewed as newcomers, and their significance is partly constructed in relation to 
the individual’s past. Interestingly, the villagers’ stories implied that 
competencies other than digital competence were more significant and 
personally meaningful in their lives. For instance, we were told stories about 
how the villagers managed in the past to collectively gather money to buy a TV 
and a piano for the village school, how they used to organise trips to the 
theatre in the nearest city or how they wrote and staged a play about the 
history of the village. In regard to these collaborative efforts, the various 
modalities of agency (Jyrkämä, 2008)—that is, knowing how to, being able to, 
having to, having the opportunity to, wanting to and feeling—seem to come 
together. The skills and competences that these stories demonstrate do not 
include digital competences. In our analysis, we noticed that to understand the 
meaning of Internet and digital competence from the respondent’s viewpoint, 
one has to acknowledge the life course of the respondent; in other words, this 
must be done to view digital competence from the time perspective (see also 
Emirbayer & Mische, 1998). This became evident as several respondents 
talked extensively about their previous lives without digital technologies (see 
also Suopajärvi, 2014). 
  
Second, the villagers were keen to situate their personal lives into their home 
villages. Their life histories are included in their everyday lives. The historical 
and cultural habits of the villages are embedded into the newcomers step by 
step, and it takes time to accept and to be accepted in a village: 
 

[...] Getting used to everything new, it takes its time. (Female, 78 years, 
Interview 1) 
 
[...] By doing something together, children living in the village learn. (Female, 
78 years, Interview 1) 

In village time, the rhythm of the year provides frames and structures. There 
are some regularly repeated events in the village, and countless villagers 
organise and attend these social ceremonies/events. Nature and the four 
distinct seasons play a crucial role in village time, in which the past, the 
present and the future are present at the same time. For example, summertime 
is associated with activities and competences (e.g. not getting lost in the 
woods) other than digital competence, as evidenced by this excerpt from our 
first interview: 



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R1: [...] In the summer, you get to be out in nature a lot more, fishing and 
picking berries. (Male, 64 years) 
 
R2: Yes, that’s right. (Female, 78 years) 

 
R1: It can be that summer always takes you to the woods. (Male, 64 years) 
 
R2: Yeah, that’s what it does. You know my husband [name omitted], even if he 
is 86 [years of age]—and he was already 86 last summer—he picked blueberries 
and lingonberries for us, just like that! [...] And our daughters were a bit worried 
about Dad getting lost. But our son [name omitted] said that Dad knows the 
area so well that when he goes to his own part of the woods, he will not get lost. 
(Female, 78 years) 

 
Third, the issue of societal time came up, especially in the discussions 
concerning communication habits, which have changed extensively in recent 
decades. Information technology has brought about new methods of keeping 
in touch. As one respondent in the first interview stated, “Paper letters are 
water under the bridge” (male, 62 years). However, the local history, culture 
and habits play an important role in everyday life. Even if information 
technology is subverting some traditional structures, it is formulating new 
ones at the same time. One respondent in the second interview talked about 
the changes: 
 

R1: Earlier, there were no phones. [—] If you had something to take care of, you 
had to visit. (Male, 64 years) 
  
R1: I have acquaintances in Southern and Central Finland. I usually check 
online [to see] what are they doing [and] what is happening there. (Male, 64 
years) 
 

Even if communication inside the village has been decreasing, the respondents 
stated that they communicate via the Internet with their family members who 
live far away. 
 

Diverse Individual and Distributed Digital Competences  

Definitional issues surrounding the concepts of media literacy, digital literacy 
and digital competence have been and will continue to be debated. According 
to Livingstone, Van Couvering and Thumim (2005), one ongoing debate is 
“whether media literacy is most usefully thought of as a societal capacity (‘a 
media literate society’) or an individual competence or skill” (p. 5). Lipponen 
(2007) proposed the concept of situated and distributed media literacy, which 
cannot be described using generic, context-free knowledge and skill 
specifications. In the situated and distributed media literacy framework, 
participation in media communities and the viewpoint of media agency are 
central. However, Lipponen argued that the more generic and situated 
viewpoints of media literacy are best seen as complementary to each other.  
 
Our data confirm that solely belonging to a certain chronological age group 
does not define a person’s digital competences or media preferences (see 
Harrington, Bielby, & Bardo, 2014; Ofcom, 2006). Harrington, Bielby and 
Bardo (2014) argued that assuming too much homogeneity regarding older 
media users and audiences has, to date, been a tendency of media/cultural 
studies. Sixteen respondents aged 62 to 86 years took part in our study, and 
they constituted a diverse group in terms of their self-reported Internet use 
and digital competences. The group included non-users, moderate users and 
active users. For example, one of the more active Internet users (age 67) told 
us that she considered the Internet “a necessity” for her. In her Internet use, 
the modalities of agency (Jyrkämä, 2008) seemed to come together as she told 



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us that she knew how to use her laptop for banking, making doctor’s 
appointments, signing up for courses, purchasing tickets, searching for 
information and updating her blog, among other activities. She reported good 
digital competences in all areas: information, communication, content 
creation, safety and problem-solving (Ferrari, 2013). However, as Lipponen 
(2007, p. 57) concluded, media agency can also be seen as resisting, 
contesting and deviating from customary ways of thinking and acting. In the 
abovementioned case, the respondent reported that she used “almost 
everything” on the Internet but did not want to use Facebook (cf. Quinn, 
2014).  
 
Conversely, five participants in our research did not use the Internet at all. 
Their decision not to use the Internet was related to the interaction of various 
modalities of agency (see also Hakkarainen, 2012). In the case of one 78-year-
old non-user, the dynamic interaction of modalities of agency could be seen as 
she talked about how starting a computer class and experiencing difficulties 
there because of poor hearing (being able to) had changed her willingness 
(wanting to) to learn new computer skills. This excerpt also demonstrates how 
the meaningful subject of digital competence in this case is actually a dyad—
that is, a husband and a wife, instead of an individual person:  
 

My husband [name omitted] and I, we went to that computer class together, and 
I thought that, for sure, I will learn these things. [...] But that didn’t work out, 
because my husband [name omitted], who, at that time, already had pretty poor 
hearing, and the instructor teaching the course, he was talking behind our 
backs, and for a man, he had such a quiet voice that even I couldn’t hear. So, I 
didn’t want to bother. I dropped out of the course. (Female, 78 years, Interview 
1) 

 
Looking at the data from the present research, we argue that digital 
competence and, therefore, to some extent, media literacy are very much 
distributed competences of elderly dyads (couples living together), families 
with three generations and informal networks of villagers. In all the focus 
group interviews, the issue of children, grandchildren or villagers doing 
Internet tasks (e.g. searching for recipes and paying bills) for the respondents 
and helping and supporting them in their Internet use was evident (see also 
Livingstone, Van Couvering, & Thumim, 2005), as the following excerpts 
show:  

 
I give my bills to my daughter [name omitted], [and] she pays them. I don’t even 
have the machine. Yes, they [her children] would have bought a computer for 
me, but I said I won’t take it. I don’t want to learn how to use it. (Female, 86 
years, Interview 1) 
 
I don’t use the computer at all. [...] Not in any way, I don’t even open it. I have 
such a great secretary [refers to her husband] that I don’t need to. (Female, 69 
years, Interview 2) 
 
I manage very well [without the Internet] because my daughter uses it. [...] She 
does everything for me. (Female, 78 years, Interview 3) 

 
Therefore, seeing digital competence only as an individual characteristic 
provides a limited view. Agency can be seen in the way in which individuals 
know from whom to ask for help and how to do so if and when needed 
(Lipponen, 2007).  
 
Conversely, respondents’ understanding regarding the opportunities afforded 
by the Internet technologies developed through their interactions with their 
children and grandchildren. As Lipponen (2007, p. 57) argued, “Agency is 
essentially connected with an understanding about what resources are 
available, how to find them, and how to use them”. For example, one 
respondent told us how her grandson found information about a car accident 



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from the Internet, and another stated that her grandson helped her with a 
computer problem: 
 

Yesterday my grandson [name omitted] came, opened his laptop and started to 
look for where the car accident had happened. He was saying “Oh, it was right 
there”. (Female, 85 years, Interview 2) 
 
And then our grandson [name omitted], the youngest one, who is eight years 
now … I was trying to send a photo the other day, and it’s kind of funny that this 
first grader asked me what was the problem I had with it. (Female, 68 years, 
Interview 3) 

Social or Societal Pressure to Use the Internet  

During this first stage of our research process, we also wanted to examine our 
data from the modality of agency of having to, which refers to the physical, 
social normative and moral barriers, necessities and constraints (Jyrkämä, 
2008) related to our respondents’ Internet use and digital competence. The 
results of our analysis coincide with those of our previous research 
(Hakkarainen, 2012), indicating that older people experience pressure from 
society to use the Internet. Some of the pressure reported by our respondents 
was clearly partly social and partly self-inflicted in nature, as in the case of one 
respondent who worked as the village representative in the Regional Council 
and who described the interplay of the modalities of having to and wanting to 
in the following way (Interview 1):  
 

Respondent: Because I ended up in this position [representative in the Regional 
Council], I want to take care of my responsibilities as well as possible. Well, of 
course school children have contacted me a lot [...]. (Male, 62 years)  
 
Interviewer: How have they contacted you? 
 
Respondent: Through e-mail.  

 
Older people’s social networks are highly important in terms of Internet use 
and digital competence, as Livingstone, Van Couvering and Thumim (2005, p. 
56) argued, “The more people one knows who use, say, email, the more 
incentive one has to use it oneself; the more one’s community is ‘wired’, the 
greater the benefits of participating online”. Several respondents talked about 
the necessity of using the Internet in present-day society and developing one’s 
digital competences. The having to modality was talked about both in positive 
and negative ways, as the following excerpts indicate: 
 

[...] Because we live in a computer age like this, it is clear, because it is an 
electric age, where we have to use and learn how to use [the Internet]. [...] I 
always use it [Internet] to check my e-mails and pay my bills. And if I have 
something to take care of, I know how to go there [on the Internet]. (Male, 64 
years, Interview 1) 
 
R1: [...] and I just wonder how someone not using the Internet, how is he able to 
manage anymore? (Female, 69 years, Interview 3) 
 
R2: Yeah, and you need to have a printer, too, if the forms will be there [on the 
Internet]. (Female, 84 years, Interview 3)  

 
The respondents also had several examples about not complying with the 
social pressures to use the Internet, thereby showing media agency that 
entails resisting and deviating from customary ways of thinking and acting 
(Lipponen, 2007, p. 57): 
 

Interviewer: Have you ever felt that you would like to learn [how to use the 
Internet]? 
 



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R1: Well, no. They [family members] told me that they will bring it [iPad] to me, 
but I said don’t bring it to me; I will manage without. (Female, 85 years, 
Interview 2) 
 
R2: It’s not my thing. I don’t want to stare at the screen. (Female, 69 years, 
Interview 2) 

 
R3: And then we have that villager [name omitted], for instance, she stills 
travels to the city to pay her bills at the bank. (Female, 78 years, Interview 1) 

 

Discussion 
 
In this study, we used the theory of modalities of agency (Jyrkämä, 2008) to 
explore the self-reported digital competences (Ferrari, 2013; see also 
Lipponen, 2007) of 16 older Finnish people, aged 62 to 86 years, who live in 
three remote rural villages in Finnish Lapland. We selected two modalities of 
agency—that is, knowing how to and having to—through which we examined 
our data. We sought answers to the following questions: How do the 
respondents assess their digital competences and the need to enhance them? 
Do the respondents report feeling social or societal pressure to use the 
Internet? If so, how does this pressure manifest itself? 
 
The analysis of the data indicated, first of all, that the participants in our study 
were a very diverse group and that there are differences in terms of their self-
reported Internet use and digital competences. Villagers assess the need to use 
ICT-based solutions from their own personal viewpoints. Their everyday lives 
were founded on different kinds of habits and life history. Hence, the roles of 
digital competences were mainly small in their everyday lives, even if they 
knew in theory the advantages of using ICT. However, if villagers had a 
personal need to use ICT, they were keen and willing to develop their 
competences. This points out to the need to provide specifically designed need-
based training and support for elderly people (see also González, Fanjul, & 
Cabezuelo, 2015). 
 
According to the data, it is clear that we need to view digital competences from 
a time perspective by considering the life course of the respondent (see also 
Emirbayer & Mische, 1998) and an aspect of time that we termed “village 
time”—that is, a timeline for actions at the level of the village, such as annual 
or other periodically recurring social events. Based on our results, we also 
argue that digital competences are very much the distributed competences of 
elderly dyads (couples living together), families with three generations and 
informal networks of villagers and should not, therefore, be assessed only as 
an individual characteristic. 
 
The meanings of digital competences in the respondents’ everyday lives in the 
village did not always encounter the present-day understanding regarding the 
crucial role of digital competences in contemporary society (e.g. European 
Commission, 2010). The meanings assigned to Internet use and digital 
competences were often subordinate to other, more meaningful previous, 
present or future activities and competences (see also Hakkarainen, 2012; 
Hakkarainen & Hyvönen, 2010; Kilpeläinen 2014; Talsi, 2014). In other words, 
the villagers were assessing and mapping these meanings through their own 
everyday life events, as well as the needs and communities to which they 
belonged (see also Lipponen, 2007). 
 
Looking from the perspective of modalities of agency, the data indicate that 
digital competences are related to the dynamic interplay of the modalities of 
agency (Jyrkämä, 2008); of these, we looked closely at the modalities of 
knowing how to and having to. To gain a deeper understanding of the 



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interaction between the various modalities, our next step in this research is to 
analyse the present research data through all the modalities of agency.  
 
 

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http://stakeholders.ofcom.org.uk/binaries/research/media-literacy/older.pdf
http://stakeholders.ofcom.org.uk/binaries/research/media-literacy/older.pdf
http://www.stat.fi/til/sutivi/2014/sutivi_2014_2014-11-06_tau_008_fi.html
http://www.stat.fi/til/sutivi/2014/sutivi_2014_2014-11-06_tau_008_fi.html
http://www.adulterc.org/applications/ClassifiedListingsManager/inc_classifiedlistingsmanager.asp?ItemID=1160&CategoryID=147

	Päivi Rasi
	Arja Kilpeläinen
	Abstract
	Introduction
	Digital Competences of Older People
	Modalities of Agency as a Theoretical Approach
	Research Questions, Data and Analysis
	Results
	Digital Competences from a Time Perspective
	Diverse Individual and Distributed Digital Competences
	Social or Societal Pressure to Use the Internet

	Discussion
	References