Education With ICT
Information and Communications
Technology (ICT) can impact student learning when teachers are digitally
literate and understand how to integrate it into curriculum.
Schools use a diverse set of ICT tools to communicate, create, disseminate, store, and manage information.(6) In
some contexts, ICT has also become integral to the teaching-learning
interaction, through such approaches as replacing chalkboards with
interactive digital whiteboards, using students’ own smartphones or
other devices for learning during class time, and the “flipped
classroom” model where students watch lectures at home on the computer
and use classroom time for more interactive exercises.
When teachers are digitally literate and trained to use ICT, these approaches can lead to higher order thinking skills, provide creative and individualized options for students to express their understandings, and leave students better prepared to deal with ongoing technological change in society and the workplace.(18)
ICT issues planners must consider include: considering the total cost-benefit equation, supplying and maintaining the requisite infrastructure, and ensuring investments are matched with teacher support and other policies aimed at effective ICT use.(16)
In many countries, digital literacy is being built through the incorporation of information and communication technology (ICT) into schools. Some common educational applications of ICT include:
Minority language groups: Students whose mother tongue is different from the official language of instruction are less likely to have computers and internet connections at home than students from the majority. There is also less material available to them online in their own language, putting them at a disadvantage in comparison to their majority peers who gather information, prepare talks and papers, and communicate more using ICT.(39) Yet ICT tools can also help improve the skills of minority language students—especially in learning the official language of instruction—through features such as automatic speech recognition, the availability of authentic audio-visual materials, and chat functions.(2)(17)
Students with different styles of learning: ICT can provide diverse options for taking in and processing information, making sense of ideas, and expressing learning. Over 87% of students learn best through visual and tactile modalities, and ICT can help these students ‘experience’ the information instead of just reading and hearing it.(20)(37) Mobile devices can also offer programmes (“apps”) that provide extra support to students with special needs, with features such as simplified screens and instructions, consistent placement of menus and control features, graphics combined with text, audio feedback, ability to set pace and level of difficulty, appropriate and unambiguous feedback, and easy error correction.(24)(29)
When teachers are digitally literate and trained to use ICT, these approaches can lead to higher order thinking skills, provide creative and individualized options for students to express their understandings, and leave students better prepared to deal with ongoing technological change in society and the workplace.(18)
ICT issues planners must consider include: considering the total cost-benefit equation, supplying and maintaining the requisite infrastructure, and ensuring investments are matched with teacher support and other policies aimed at effective ICT use.(16)
Issues and Discussion
Digital culture and digital literacy: Computer technologies
and other aspects of digital culture have changed the ways people live,
work, play, and learn, impacting the construction and distribution of
knowledge and power around the world.(14)
Graduates who are less familiar with digital culture are increasingly
at a disadvantage in the national and global economy. Digital
literacy—the skills of searching for, discerning, and producing
information, as well as the critical use of new media for full
participation in society—has thus become an important consideration for
curriculum frameworks.(8)In many countries, digital literacy is being built through the incorporation of information and communication technology (ICT) into schools. Some common educational applications of ICT include:
- One laptop per child: Less expensive laptops have been designed for use in school on a 1:1 basis with features like lower power consumption, a low cost operating system, and special re-programming and mesh network functions.(42) Despite efforts to reduce costs, however, providing one laptop per child may be too costly for some developing countries.(41)
- Tablets: Tablets are small personal computers with a touch screen, allowing input without a keyboard or mouse. Inexpensive learning software (“apps”) can be downloaded onto tablets, making them a versatile tool for learning.(7)(25) The most effective apps develop higher order thinking skills and provide creative and individualized options for students to express their understandings.(18)
- Interactive White Boards or Smart Boards: Interactive white boards allow projected computer images to be displayed, manipulated, dragged, clicked, or copied.(3) Simultaneously, handwritten notes can be taken on the board and saved for later use. Interactive white boards are associated with whole-class instruction rather than student-centred activities.(38) Student engagement is generally higher when ICT is available for student use throughout the classroom.(4)
- E-readers: E-readers are electronic devices that can hold hundreds of books in digital form, and they are increasingly utilized in the delivery of reading material.(19) Students—both skilled readers and reluctant readers—have had positive responses to the use of e-readers for independent reading.(22) Features of e-readers that can contribute to positive use include their portability and long battery life, response to text, and the ability to define unknown words.(22) Additionally, many classic book titles are available for free in e-book form.
- Flipped Classrooms: The flipped classroom model, involving lecture and practice at home via computer-guided instruction and interactive learning activities in class, can allow for an expanded curriculum. There is little investigation on the student learning outcomes of flipped classrooms.(5) Student perceptions about flipped classrooms are mixed, but generally positive, as they prefer the cooperative learning activities in class over lecture.(5)(35)
ICT and Teacher Professional Development:
Teachers need specific professional development opportunities in order
to increase their ability to use ICT for formative learning assessments,
individualized instruction, accessing online resources, and for
fostering student interaction and collaboration.(15)
Such training in ICT should positively impact teachers’ general
attitudes towards ICT in the classroom, but it should also provide
specific guidance on ICT teaching and learning within each discipline.
Without this support, teachers tend to use ICT for skill-based
applications, limiting student academic thinking.(32)
To support teachers as they change their teaching, it is also
essential for education managers, supervisors, teacher educators, and
decision makers to be trained in ICT use.(11)
Ensuring benefits of ICT investments:
To ensure the investments made in ICT benefit students, additional
conditions must be met. School policies need to provide schools with the
minimum acceptable infrastructure for ICT, including stable and
affordable internet connectivity and security measures such as filters
and site blockers. Teacher policies need to target basic ICT literacy
skills, ICT use in pedagogical settings, and discipline-specific uses.(21)
Successful implementation of ICT requires integration of ICT in the
curriculum. Finally, digital content needs to be developed in local
languages and reflect local culture.(40)
Ongoing technical, human, and organizational supports on all of these
issues are needed to ensure access and effective use of ICT.(21)
Resource Constrained Contexts: The
total cost of ICT ownership is considerable: training of teachers and
administrators, connectivity, technical support, and software, amongst
others.(42)
When bringing ICT into classrooms, policies should use an incremental
pathway, establishing infrastructure and bringing in sustainable and
easily upgradable ICT.(16)
Schools in some countries have begun allowing students to bring their
own mobile technology (such as laptop, tablet, or smartphone) into class
rather than providing such tools to all students—an approach called
Bring Your Own Device.(1)(27)(34) However, not all families can afford devices or service plans for their children.(30) Schools must ensure all students have equitable access to ICT devices for learning.
Inclusiveness Considerations
Digital Divide: The digital divide refers to disparities of
digital media and internet access both within and across countries, as
well as the gap between people with and without the digital literacy and
skills to utilize media and internet.(23)(26)(31)
The digital divide both creates and reinforces socio-economic
inequalities of the world’s poorest people. Policies need to
intentionally bridge this divide to bring media, internet, and digital
literacy to all students, not just those who are easiest to reach.Minority language groups: Students whose mother tongue is different from the official language of instruction are less likely to have computers and internet connections at home than students from the majority. There is also less material available to them online in their own language, putting them at a disadvantage in comparison to their majority peers who gather information, prepare talks and papers, and communicate more using ICT.(39) Yet ICT tools can also help improve the skills of minority language students—especially in learning the official language of instruction—through features such as automatic speech recognition, the availability of authentic audio-visual materials, and chat functions.(2)(17)
Students with different styles of learning: ICT can provide diverse options for taking in and processing information, making sense of ideas, and expressing learning. Over 87% of students learn best through visual and tactile modalities, and ICT can help these students ‘experience’ the information instead of just reading and hearing it.(20)(37) Mobile devices can also offer programmes (“apps”) that provide extra support to students with special needs, with features such as simplified screens and instructions, consistent placement of menus and control features, graphics combined with text, audio feedback, ability to set pace and level of difficulty, appropriate and unambiguous feedback, and easy error correction.(24)(29)
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