The article
provides a critical reflection on the benefits of ICT in education; it has
outlined challenges of ICT provision in learning environments at school and at home.
It discusses the present state of ICT provision, with
the focus on British schools. The article noted that with government policies
in recent years to provide internet access for every children and every school,
with industry supporting diverse digital education initiatives, and with
families gaining internet access at home, much rides on the claim that digital
technologies will be as important in the 21st century. The article also
discussed how traditional learning
outcome could be enhanced as well as the impediments to establishing the
benefits of ICT in education. However, this quote in the article got me thinking,
“Yeah, it’s IT, that’s what it’s called, and you go, you have about ten
computers in a big computer room and you work in groups to do like stuff on the
computer. They let you go on the internet but it has to be educational stuff
you look up and all that. That’s boring but we don’t listen to that and we look
up what we want when the teacher’s not looking. (Angie, 9)”
However
according to Wellington (2004, p. 33) as referenced in the article, claimed
that there are ‘inherent difficulties in evaluating the effect of any learning
intervention and attributed it to the cause-effect relationships in education.
These difficulties are here to stay.’ In addition, the article identified 3 problems
to take notes.
1. The problem with the literature being conceptual and methodological
2. The problem with policy-related and practical
3. The problem of Intriguing
The article
identified various studies that indicated that increased internet use raised subsequent
achievement in reading; though not in mathematics high-achieving children get
more from gaining internet access than low-achieving children.
Another study found
that home access to a computer and/or the internet is positively associated
with levels of educational attainment at both KS3 and KS4. Further analysis by
these researchers showed that internet access plays a greater role than
computer access although, as the researchers also caution.
Nonetheless,
the findings do suggest that the lesser likelihood of home access to a computer
or, especially, the internet among teenagers from poorer families may
contribute to the explanation of why they tend to make less progress from KS3 to
KS4.
This paper
examines these two issues, asking, first, does the evidence support the claim
that ICT enhances learning and, second, what is meant by learning, and how are
expectations of learning changing?
In conclusion,
Schooling in the digital age is a complex, compromised and often contradictory
affair […but] this is not to say technology cannot act as a focus for
improvement. (Selwyn, 2011, p. 136)
Livingstone distinguishes
three forms of critique relevant to grand claims made for the new technologies,
asking in essence; what’s really going on, how can this be explained, and how could
things be otherwise.
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