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Technologies – for improvement in teaching and learning process
Choosing the right technological tools for your school is a vital
step in ensuring the effective use of ICT in Education. This section
gives information about technologies that can be used in education and
about challenges in using ICT in Education.
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The term, information and communication technologies (ICT), refers
to forms of technology that are used to transmit, store, create,
display, share or exchange information by electronic means. This broad
definition of ICT includes such technologies as radio,
television, video, DVD, telephone (both fixed line and mobile phones),
satellite systems, computer and network hardware and software;
as well as the equipment and services associated with these
technologies, such as videoconferencing, e-mail and
blogs.
Realizing educational objectives of the "information age"
requires integrating modern forms of information and communication
technologies (ICT) into education. To do this effectively,
education planners, principals, teachers, and technology specialists
must make many decisions in the areas of: technical,
training, financial, pedagogical and infrastructure requirements. For
many, this is a complex task similar to not just learning a new
language, but learning how to teach in a new language.
This section looks at the tools themselves, from the satellites that
link nations, to the machines that students work on in the classroom.
It is intended to help educators; policy makers, planners, curriculum
developers and others find their way through the often confusing maze
of ICT tools, terms and systems.
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Broadly speaking, educators, policy makers and researchers all seem
to agree on the potential of ICT to have a significant and positive
impact on education. What is still being debated, however, is the
precise role ICT should play in education reform and how best to ensure
that potential is fulfilled.
This section contains articles, reports and links to online journals
and websites which explore the ways ICT has impacted on
education, and in what direction technology in schools should
be heading.
(This section also provides articles describing the
benefits that can be derived from the use of ICT in
education. In addition, articles and case studies are provided
which offer guidelines for integrating ICT into
educational programmes, including issues to be
considered, lessons learned, and common mistakes
to be avoided).
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Stories of exploration, success and failure - drawn from all over
the world - to demonstrate policies, strategies and practical measures
in the use of technologies. Topics will include, individually or
combined, the following:
- Multi-channel learning
- Educational television
- Educational radio
- Web-based instruction
- Libraries for exploration
- Practical activities in science and technology
- Use of the media
- Targeted use of technologies in areas such as: early childhood
development, low density populations, adult literacy, women’s
education, and workforce upgrading
- Technologies for teacher preparation and career-long training
- Technologies for policy planning, design and data management
- Technologies for school management
Technologies Today
Review of what is available in the different areas of technology for
learning:
- Instructional materials
- Audio, visual and digital products
- Software and content-ware
- Modes of connectivity
- Media
- Educational web sites
Technologies Tomorrow
A glimpse into the future of technologies to excite the imagination of
practitioners and decision makers and assist them in planning for the
future, not only on the basis of what is available but also what is
coming.
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Radio and television have been used in education since the early
20th century.
These forms of ICT have been used in three main
ways:
- Direct class teaching, including Interactive Radio Instruction
(IRI) and televised lessons.
- School broadcasting, where broadcast programming provides
complementary teaching andlearning resources not otherwise
available.
- General educational programming which provide general and informal
educational opportunities.
IRI consists of broadcasting lessons to classrooms on a daily basis.
The radio lessons, on particular topics and aimed at specific levels,
at particular levels, provide regular, structured assistance to
teachers and serve to improve the quality of teaching and enhance
learning. IRI also serves to expand access to education, by bringing
ready-made lessons to remote schools and learning centres which have
few resources and teachers.Studies suggest that IRI projects have had a
positive impact on both access to and quality of formal and non-formal
education. It is also a cost-effective means of delivering educational
content to a large number of people.
Televised lessons can be used to supplement other course material or
can be stand-alone lessons. Such lessons have progressed over the
years from simply being television programmes showing teachers talking,
to being more engaging, interactive programmes which incorporate
issues relevant to the learners. Educational television programmes are
often accompanied by printed materials and other resources to enhance
learning and interaction.
Educational broadcasting is widespread in the Asia-Pacific
region. In India , for example, the Indira Gandhi National Open
University broadcasts television & video conferences
courses.
Aside from being used for broadcasting specific lessons, radio
and television can also be used to broadcast general educational
programmes. Basically, any radio or television programme with
educational value can be considered a "general educational programme".
One example is "Sesame Street" an educational television programme for
children from the United States. Another example is the "Farm
Radio Forum", a Canadian educational radio discussion forum.
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Radio and television have been used widely as educational tools
since the 1920s and the 1950s, respectively. There are three general
approaches to the use of radio and TV broadcasting in education:
- direct class teaching, where broadcast programming substitutes for
teachers on a temporary basis;
- school broadcasting, where broadcast programming provides
complementary teaching and learning resources not otherwise
available
- general educational programming over community, national and
international stations which provide general and informal educational
opportunities
The most notable and best documented example of the direct class
teaching approach is Interactive Radio Instruction (IRI).This consists
of "ready-made 20-30 minute direct teaching and learning exercises to
the classroom on a daily basis. The radio lessons, developed around
specific learning objectives at particular levels of Maths, science,
health and languages in national & state curricula, are intended to
improve the quality of classroom teaching and to act as a regular,
structured aid to poorly trained classroom teachers in under-resourced
schools." IRI projects have been implemented in India and other south
Asian Countries. In Asia, IRI was first implemented in Thailand in
1980; Indonesia, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal rolled out their own
IRI projects in the 1990s. What differentiates IRI from most other
distance education programs is that its primary objective is to raise
the quality of learning - and not merely to expand educational access -
and it has had much success in both formal and non-formal settings.
Extensive research around the world has shown that many IRI projects
have had a positive impact on learning outcomes and on educational
equity. And with its economies of scale, it has proven to be a
cost-effective strategy relative to other interventions.
Centrally produced television programs are beamed via satellite
throughout the country on a scheduled time to schools, covering the
same secondary curriculum as that offered in ordinary schools. Each
hour focuses on a different subject and teacher-led activities.
Students are exposed to a variety of teachers on television but have
one home teacher at the school for all disciplines in each grade.
The design of the programme has undergone many changes through the
years, shifting from a "talking heads" approach to more interactive and
dynamic programming that "link[s] the community to the programme around
the teaching method. The strategy meant combining community issues into
the programs, offering children an integrated education, involving the
community at large in the organization and management of the school and
stimulating students to carry out community activities." Assessments of
Television programs have been encouraging: drop out rates are
slightly better than those of general secondary schools and
significantly better than in technical schools. In Asia, the 44 radio
and TV universities in China (including the China Central Radio and
Television University), Universitas Terbuka in Indonesia, and Indira
Ghandi National Open University have made extensive use of radio and
television, both for direct class teaching and for school broadcasting,
to reach more of their respective large populations. For these
institutions, broadcasts are often accompanied by printed materials and
audio cassettes.
Japan’s University of the Air was broadcasting 160 television and 160
radio courses in 2000. Each course consists of 15-45-minute lectures
broadcast nationwide once a week for 15 weeks. Courses are aired over
University-owned stations from 6 am to 12 noon. Students are also given
supplemental print materials, face-to-face instruction, and online
tutorials.
Often deployed with print materials, cassettes and CD-ROMS, school
broadcasting, like direct class teaching, is geared to national
curricula and developed for a range of subject areas. But unlike direct
class instruction, school broadcasting is not intended to substitute
for the teacher but merely as an enrichment of traditional classroom
instruction. School broadcasting is more flexible than IRI since
teachers decide how they will integrate the broadcast materials into
their classes. Large broadcasting corporations that provide school
broadcasts include the British Broadcasting Corporation Education Radio
TV in the United Kingdom and the NHK Japanese Broadcasting Station. In
developing countries, school broadcasts are often a result of a
partnership between the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of
Information.
General educational programming consists of a broad range of
programme types - news programs, documentary programs, quiz shows,
educational cartoons, etc. - that afford non-formal educational
opportunities for all types of learners. In a sense, any radio or TV
programming with informational and educational value can be considered
under this type. Some notable examples that have a global reach are the
United States-based television show Sesame Street, the all-information
television channels National Geographic and Discovery, and the radio
programme Voice of America. The Farm Radio Forum, which began in Canada
in the 1940s and which has since served as a model for radio discussion
programs worldwide, is another example of non-formal educational
programming.
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Research has shown that the appropriate use of ICTs can catalyze the
paradigmatic shift in both content and pedagogy that is at the heart of
education reform in the 21st century. If designed and implemented
properly, ICT-supported education can promote the acquisition of the
knowledge and skills that will empower students for lifelong
learning.
When used appropriately, ICTs—especially computers and Internet
technologies— enable new ways of teaching and learning rather than
simply allow teachers and students to do what they have done before in
a better way. These new ways of teaching and learning are underpinned
by constructivist theories of learning and constitute a shift from a
teacher-centered pedagogy—in its worst form characterized by
memorization and rote learning—to one that is learner-centered.
- Active learning. ICT-enhanced learning mobilizes
tools for examination, calculation and analysis of information, thus
providing a platform for student inquiry, analysis and construction of
new information. Learners therefore learn as they do and, whenever
appropriate, work on real-life problems in-depth, making learning less
abstract and more relevant to the learner’s life situation. In this
way, and in contrast to memorization-based or rote learning,
ICT-enhanced learning promotes increased learner engagement.
ICT-enhanced learning is also “just-in-time” learning in which learners
can choose what to learn when they need to learn it.
- Collaborative learning. ICT-supported learning
encourages interaction and cooperation among students, teachers, and
experts regardless of where they are. Apart from modeling real-world
interactions, ICT-supported learning provides learners the opportunity
to work with people from different cultures, thereby helping to enhance
learners’ teaming and communicative skills as well as their global
awareness. It models learning done throughout the learner’s lifetime by
expanding the learning space to include not just peers but also mentors
and experts from different fields.
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The educational effectiveness of ICTs depends on how they are used
and for what purpose. And like any other educational tool or mode of
educational delivery, ICTs do not work for everyone, everywhere in the
same way.
Enhancing access
It is difficult to quantify the degree to which ICTs have helped
expand access to basic education since most of the interventions for
this purpose have been small-scale and under-reported., while at the
primary level there is little evidence that ICT-based models have
thrived. In higher education and adult training, there is some evidence
that educational opportunities are being opened to individuals and
groups who are constrained from attending traditional universities.
Each of the 11 so-called mega-universities, the biggest and most
well-established open and distance institutions in the world (which
include the Open University of the United Kingdom,the Indira Gandhi
National Open University of India, the China TV University System, the
Universitas Terbuka of Indonesia, and the University of South Africa,
among others) has an annual enrollment of more than 100,000, and
together they serve approximately 2.8 million. Compare that with the 14
million combined enrollments of the 3,500 colleges and universities in
the United States.
Raising quality
The impact of educational radio and television broadcasts on the
quality of basic education remains an under-researched area, but what
little research there is suggests that these interventions are as
effective as traditional classroom instruction. Of the many educational
broadcast projects, the Interactive Radio Instruction project has been
the most comprehensively analyzed. Findings provide strong evidence of
the project’s effectiveness in raising the quality of education as
demonstrated by increased scores on standardized tests as well as
improved attendance.
In contrast, assessments of the use of computers, the Internet and
related technologies for distance learning have been equivocal.
Russell, in his comprehensive review of research, claims that there is
"no significant difference" between the test scores of learners taking
ICT-based distance learning courses and those receiving face-to-face
instruction. However, others claim that such generalizations are in
conclusive; pointing out that the large number of articles on ICT-based
distance learning does not include original experimental research or
case studies. Other critics argue that dropout rates are much higher
when instruction is delivered at a distance via ICTs.
There have also been many studies that seem to support the claim
that the use of computers enhances and amplifies existing curricula, as
measured through standardized testing. Specifically, research shows
that the use of computers as tutors, for drill and practice, and for
instructional delivery, combined with traditional instruction, results
in increases in learning in the traditional curriculum and basic skills
areas, as well as higher test scores in some subjects compared to
traditional instruction alone. Students also learn more quickly,
demonstrate greater retention, and are better motivated to learn when
they work with computers. But there are those who claim that these
represent modest gains and, in any case, much of the research on which
these claims are based are methodologically flawed.
Research likewise suggests that the use of computers, the Internet,
and related technologies, given adequate teacher training and support,
can indeed facilitate the transformation of the learning environment
into a learner-centered one. But these studies are criticized for being
mostly exploratory and descriptive in nature and lacking in empirical
rigor. There is as yet no strong evidence that this new learning
environment fosters improved learning outcomes. What does exist are
qualitative data based on observations and analysis of student and
teacher perceptions that suggest a positive impact on learning.
One of the most critical problems in trying to assess the
effectiveness of computers and the Internet as transformational tools
is that standardized tests cannot capture the kinds of benefits that
are expected to be gained in a learner-centered environment. Moreover,
since technology use is fully integrated into the larger learning
system, it is very difficult to isolate the technology variable and
determine whether any observed gains are due to technology use or to
some other factor or combination of factors.
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