A paper for presentation at the AERA conference San Francisco, CA 28 April – May 2013 Alec Ian Gershberg, The New School (USA) and Universitat Oberta de.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
MEASURES OF SUCCESS: An Evaluators Perspective Carol L. Colbeck Director & Associate Professor Center for the Study of Higher Education The Pennsylvania.
Advertisements

Second Information Technology in Education Study (SITES) A Project of the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement (IEA)
School Factors Discussion Guide PISA/PIRLS Task Force International Reading Association January 2005.
1 When DAP Meets GAP Promoting Peaceful Coexistence between Developmentally Appropriate Practice & the Need to Address the Achievement Gap International.
Latika Nirula & Earl Woodruff OISE/University of Toronto
EU perspectives on Teacher Education. 2 History Subsidiarity – Treaty Article 149 EU action restricted to Socrates and Lingua programmes until 2000 Lisbon.
Fostering Entrepreneurship Education – a EU perspective
EDEN 2008 Annual conference 14 th June 2008, Lisbon 1 The Development of eServices in an Enlarged EU: The Case of eLearning Kirsti Ala-Mutka European Commission,
1 Foundation Cooperation Fund & Warsaw School of Economics Successful Project and Programme Management with the use of PCM Methodology Beata Puszczewicz.
National Academy of Engineering of the National Academies 1 Phase II: Educating the 2020 Engineer Phase II: Adapting Engineering Education to the New Century...
R EDEFINING T HE R OLE O F M ULTI- G RADE T EACHING CHALLENGES AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS.
TWS Aid for Supervisors & Mentor Teachers Background on the TWS.
Citizens in a Knowledge Society: rethinking education from scratch. Part 2 Policies for (e-)inclusion: from physical access to meaningful use Ismael Peña-López.
Monitoring and Evaluation of ICT Use in Rural Schools Ok-choon Park Global Symposium on ICT in Education – Measuring Impact: Monitoring and Evaluation.
Programme for International Student Assessment PISA 2009 Competences of Portuguese students Warsaw, February 10, 2011 Carlos Pinto-Ferreira, Anabela Serrão.
The Education Endowment Foundation (EEF) is an independent grant-making charity dedicated to breaking the link between family income and educational achievement,
Minnesota’s Professional Development Plan to Prepare for the 2014 GED Test Amy Vickers, Minneapolis Adult Education Astrid Liden, Minnesota Department.
Group of teachers and PhD Students who teach Research Methods in Education using ICT and study them. At this moment, we have different research projects.
1 Improving School Leadership - Guidelines for Country Background Reports - Education and Training Policy Division Directorate of Education.
. N. ORELLANA*, J.M. SUAREZ*, C. BELLOCH*, B. GARGALLO**, R. BO*, G, ALMERICH*, A. SAEZ*, F. ALIAGA*, I. GASTALDO*, I. DIAZ*, R. ROIG*** AND E. GONZALEZ*.
A “Best Fit” Approach to Improving Teacher Resources Jennifer King Rice University of Maryland.
The Contribution of School-related Factors to ICT Use as a Management Tool in Primary and Secondary Education David Rodríguez-Gómez 1, Julio Meneses 2,
Interactive Whiteboards Cláir Bhána Idirghníomhacha (CBI)
BILL GATES’ CONTRIBUTION IN SKILL DEVELOPMENT
Innovations in the Finnish Education Jari Koivisto Counsellor of Education The Finnish National Board of Education.
Quality Systems for Quality Teachers:
ICT and Education Indicators S
Using technology to improve learning Stella BurtonBeaumont Community Primary school1.
ICT TEACHERS` COMPETENCIES FOR THE KNOWLEDGE SOCIETY
Technology Support on a University Campus Contingency Theory and Collaboration.
IPTS workshop on ICTs for learning the host country language by adult migrants in the EU Seville 1-2 October Key challenges Workshop on ICTs for.
Existing Frameworks: UNESCO Integration in stages The introduction and use of ICT in education proceeds in broad stages that may be conceived as a continuum.
Professional Sharing : Dr. Barley Mak Director Centre of Enhancing English Learning and Teaching Centre of Enhancing English Learning and Teaching The.
Curriculum Reform Professor WONG Yuk-shan Chairman of the Curriculum Development Council 11 December 2004.
Experiences and requirements in teacher professional development: Understanding teacher change Sylvia Linan-Thompson, Ph.D. The University of Texas at.
Assessment of Higher Education Learning Outcomes (AHELO): Update Deborah Roseveare Head, Skills beyond School Division Directorate for Education OECD 31.
Margaret J. Cox King’s College London
Promoting improvement ITE Thematic dissemination conference: secondary modern languages Hand-out Elaine Taylor HMI, National Lead for Modern Languages.
Dawne Gurbutt, Discipline Lead, Health Related Studies 11 th July 2013 Enhancing the student learning experience through Patient & Public Involvement Practice,
ICT Use to Improve Mathematics Learning in Secondary Schools Rebecca Hudson School of Mathematics and Applied Statistics University of Wollongong ACEC2010:
Keynote II - ICT4DEV Keynote II - ICT4DEV global e-schools and communities initiative transforming education, empowering communities, promoting development.
Raising the Quality of Educational Outcomes and Improving E-learning: Cross-national Evidence on Challenges and Opportunities Judit Kádár-Fülöp Indicators.
CONTRIBUTION OF THE GLOBE PROGRAM TO COMPUTER ASSISTED LEARNING AND ICT USE IN CROATIAN SCHOOLS Diana Garasic.
ICT in teaching and learning. ICT in Galician Educational System integration of ICT in all school subjects use of 1:1 move from media consuming to create.
Workshop 3 Early career teacher induction: Literacy middle years Workshop 3 Literacy teaching and NSW syllabus 1.
Dr. Tayseer Al Nahar Al Noaimi Ministry of Education- Jordan
Factors influencing teachers' professional use of ICT in primary and secondary schools in Spain Georgeta Ion1; David Rodríguez1 ; Sergi Fàbregues 2; Julio.
TECHNOLOGY INTEGRATION MAROBA M. ZOELLER UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS AUGUST 5, 2000.
Factors affecting teachers’ use of ICT as a professional tool outside the classroom Sergi Fàbregues 1, David Rodríguez-Gómez 2, Julio Meneses 1, Georgeta.
Corinne H. Lardy Cheryl L. Mason San Diego State University The Association for Science Teacher Education (ASTE) January 14-16, 2010 Sacramento, California.
School in Front of Challenges of Knowledge Society, Again and Again Liisa Ilomäki Department of Psychology University of Helsinki EDEN conference.
Incentives and stimuli: OECD TALIS (Teaching and Learning International Survey) Improving Quality in Education: OECD - MEXICO Joint Conference Mexico City,
EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY IN THE ASIA PACIFIC REGION
NOVA Evaluation Report Presented by: Dr. Dennis Sunal.
1 Teacher Talk and American Indian Student Achievement: Comparing Different Mathematics Approaches SIG-Indigenous Peoples of the Americas 2006 AERA Conference.
Method Survey conducted at the academic year and developed with the support of the Telefónica Foundation (Spain). Sample of 356 educational centres,
Technology Workshop 2 June 22, Extent of Technology Integration in Instruction by ABE Teachers.
DEVELOPING INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY LITERACY AMONG TECHNOLOGY EDUCATION PRE-SERVICE TEACHERS IN PARAGUAY Hong Kong, January 2006 Aichi University of Education.
Welcome! Take a slip of paper for each of the ideas you brought: pedagogy, content and technology tool Place your idea in the appropriate cup.
The Whole School Development & The School Grant The case of The Gambia Prepared by the World Bank Impact Evaluation Team Contacts for questions about these.
Ayoub Kafyulilo DUCE Challenges and Opportunities of Integrating ICT in Education.
An Educational Technology Integration Approach Heidi Paquette Grant UMUC, EDTC 645 Instructor: Allan Grant The United Kingdom.
New National Curriculum science: Beyond the classroom Nicola Beverley Independent Primary Science Consultant
ICTE Conference Hong Kong Thinking, Problem-solving & Sustainability Howard Middleton PhD Centre for Learning Research Queensland Australia.
New Technologies in Life Long Learning Programs for Educators Jenny Pange Professor, University of Ioannina, Greece.
e-Learning Our view and experience
Dr Diane Dalby University of Nottingham, UK.
Teacher ICT Readiness A Baseline Study 2016
Teacher ICT Readiness A Baseline Study 2016
Introducing WebQuests in the Nigerian Teacher Training Curriculum – Possibilities and Challenges (A Case Study) Ayotola Aremu & Daniel A. Morakinyo Department.
Presentation transcript:

A paper for presentation at the AERA conference San Francisco, CA 28 April – May 2013 Alec Ian Gershberg, The New School (USA) and Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (SPAIN); Julio Meneses, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (SPAIN); Noe Wiener, The New School (USA) Institutional Factors and Teacher Characteristics Affecting Classroom Technology Use

Innovative use of ICT is still the domain of few teachers Premise: practices encouraging independent, collaborative and autonomous learning (Kozma & Anderson 2002) better prepare students for the “knowledge society” However, how to foster such learning is still unclear, especially in policy circles. Equally unclear is the proper assignment of roles for teacher recruitment and professional development – for instance between the school or the State differing potentials of pre-service versus in-servive training & PD Should schools (and policy makers and Ed Schools) focus more on supporting the teachers they have or who they recruit and attract to the profession?

The research team responsible for the Spanish data we use provides a typical lament “Regardless of the frequency and variety of ICT uses, educational innovation is not the main aim of the implementation of these technologies in schools. Most of the teachers who use ICT in class admit they have implemented it mainly as a support to teaching activities they already carried out (68.3%). A mere 17.5% of the teachers claim to have adopted ICT to introduce important changes in the way they teach and they assign tasks to their students.” (Sigalés et al, 2008, emphasis added) Our present study inspired by the implications of the term “mere 17.5%” “Who are these 17.5%, and is that lower than one might expect?”

Spanish ICT Context in Most schools, internet-connected computers located in classrooms apart from students usual work area. Only 13.4% of schools feature a minimum of 10 computers distributed among regular classrooms. Fewer than half the teachers have access to an overhead digital projector, only 1 out of 3 schools has a Wi-Fi zone granting internet access from the classrooms, and only 15.4% of teachers have access to an interactive whiteboard results must be taken in the Spanish context, a less-developed ICT sector than most OECD countries. There may be implications for the developing world as well.

Data: Proyecto Internet España (PIE) Survey was funded by The Telefónica Foundation nationally representative, stratified sample administered to students, teachers and school directors in primary and secondary schools across all autonomous regions of Spain. 536 primary 273 secondary schools teachers. Nationally representative at the teacher-level Yield generalizable answers to (perhaps) less interesting questions than typical in the field

Cluster analysis: develop a taxonomy of teacher classroom ICT use Variables: frequency of use as a baseline measure. Other five relate to ICT use to foster student-centered pedagogy; “deeper” than simply using equipment for convenience Use kmeans cluster tecnique

Determinants of Grouping: Variables

Determinants of Grouping: Ordered Logit estimation

Determinants of Grouping: Change effects

Conclusions: training may matter support both for the need to attract teachers likely to become Vanguard users to the profession and for the possibility of training teachers into the Vanguard; perhaps surprising level of support for the ability of school and other government-level policies to effect increases in the Vanguard among current teachers. increases likely small compared to those focused on initial recruitment and training, but they are not insignificant. In particular, good in-service training does appear to have a positive impact.

Access is still an issue in Spain Results do support access to internet and ICT resources at school as important predictor for innovative use of ICT. Addressing infrastructure bottlenecks might still be an appropriate intervention for schools encouraging innovative ICT use

More advanced skills potentially impactful digital literacy for advanced internet use important predictor for innovative use of ICT refocusing some of the efforts in ICT education for teachers beyond basic computer skills on more intermediate internet and Web 2.0 competences might hold payoffs.

Holding positive view of effects of ICT on learning & adaptability of ICT to teaching has large impact Suggests the importance of highlighting successes to improve the overall views teachers have of the potential positive impact of ICT on learning and innovation. Still, the nature and characteristics of teachers recruited to the profession is key, especially since it’s particularly difficult to impact attitudes through policy or even training and professional development. And while somewhat manipulable, teacher’s who hold positive views of the effects of ICT on learning are likely as not to hold those views at the time they are recruited to the profession.

A paper for presentation at the AERA conference San Francisco, CA 28 April – May 2013 Alec Ian Gershberg, The New School (USA) and Universtat Oberta de Catalunya (SPAIN); Julio Meneses, Universtat Oberta de Catalunya (SPAIN); Noe Wiener, The New School (USA) Institutional Factors and Teacher Characteristics Affecting Classroom Technology Use