Sunday 5 May 2013

Report about Educational Benefits of Frequent Technology Use


Teachers who use technology frequently in their classrooms perceive greater benefits to student learning--particularly learning 21st century skills--than teachers who are less frequent users. That's one of the major findings from a K-12 technology study released Monday by researchers out of the Richard W. Riley College of Education and Leadership at Minnesota's Walden University.
The report, titled "Educators, Technology and 21st Century Skills: Dispelling Five Myths," was based on a survey of more than 1,000 K-12 educators and school administrators in the United States, specifically 783 teachers and 274 principals or assistant principals. It was designed to gauge the use of technology in the classroom and perceptions of technology in education. Researchers released the report at the ISTE 2010 convention happening this week in Denver.
What it found was a great disparity between teachers in terms of their uses of technology, although, contrary to expectations, the frequency of technology use wasn't predicted by teacher experience. New and experienced teachers were about as likely to be "frequent" users of technology in the classroom as they were to be "moderate," "sporadic," or "infrequent" users.
Use and Perceptions of Technology
About 22 percent of those surveyed were considered frequent users of technology, spending 31 percent or more of class time using technology to support learning. Seventeen percent were defined as moderate users, those who spend 21 percent to 30 percent of class time using technology; 26 percent sporadic users, spending 11 percent to 20 percent of class time using technology; and 34 percent infrequent users, who reported spending 10 percent or less of class time supporting learning with technology.
Secondary teachers tended to be more heavy users than elementary teachers. Teachers of certain subjects were also more frequent users on the whole, especially science and social studies teachers, 33 percent of whom reported being frequent users, and math teachers, 31 percent of whom reported frequent classroom technology use.
Those who reported being frequent users cited distinct benefits to student learning as a result of technology use.
According to the report's authors, "Frequent technology users place considerably more emphasis on developing students' 21st century skills--specifically, skills in accountability, collaboration, communication, creativity, critical thinking, ethics, global awareness, innovation, leadership, problem solving, productivity and self-direction. Frequent users also have more positive perceptions about technology's effects on student learning of these skills--and on student behaviors associated with these skills."
On the whole, teachers and administrators reported benefits of technology use for all types of students, from high achievers to students with behavioral and emotional issues.
Preparation and Support
But teachers also reported unsatisfactory levels of support and preparation for the use of technology in the classroom.
"In reality, teachers who have completed their initial certification or licensure since 2000 do not believe that their pre-service programs taught them how to teach 21st century skills or how to effectively incorporate technology into instruction,..." according to the report.
Of those who completed their initial certification or licensure since 2000, more than half reported that their initial teacher preparation programs failed them in these respects. But of those who completed advanced training and certification since 2000, 60 percent or more thought their advanced programs prepared them for teaching 21st century skills and incorporating technology into instruction.

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