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Wiley InterScience

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The influence of IT: perspectives from five Australian schools
J. Ainley , D. Banks & M. Fleming
  Australian Council for Educational Research
Correspondence: John Ainley, Australian Council for Educational Research, 19 Prospect Hill Road, Camberwell, Vic 3124, AUSTRALIA. Email: ainley@acer.edu.au

  *Following a protocol suggested by Bruce Rigby of the Victorian Department of Education, Employment and Training in another project.

  However in several of the SITES M2 cases it was noted that access to high quality technical resources in sufficient numbers was an essential pre-requisite for the teaching and learning innovations that followed.

Copyright © 2002 Blackwell Science
KEYWORDS
Australia • Case study • Computer • Constructivist • ICT-use • Innovation • Pedagogy • Primary • Qualitative • Schools • Secondary

ABSTRACT

Abstract Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) are now widespread in Australian schools but with variation in how, where, when and how much they are used. Computers may be located in a computer laboratory, distributed throughout the school, or students may use their own laptop computers. IT may be a subject in its own right or ICT may be used across all areas of the curriculum. It is how ICT is used in the school setting that is important in providing students with the skills to be participate in a 'knowledge society'. This paper examines the ways in which information and communication technologies influence teaching and learning in five Australian schools. Data were gathered through observation, interviews and document analysis in schools operating at the elementary and secondary grades in relatively technology rich environments. Each of the schools participated in the Australian component of the Second Information Technology in Education Study– Module 2 (SITES-M2) of innovative pedagogical practices. Several of the studies were of specific projects where ICT was the key enabler of the learning programme. Others focused on an entire school's approach to ICT as an agent for changed approaches to learning.


Accepted 31 July 2002

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1046/j.0266-4909.2002.00251.x About DOI

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