Eldis

Please note - this is a temporary window. id21 is joining forces with Eldis and therefore the id21 website has been suspended. Soon all id21 content will be available on the Eldis website.

DEEP impact: teachers and technology

While issues of access and the relative merits of satellites or solar power are being discussed internationally, a project in South Africa and Egypt is exploring what actually happens at the classroom level when ICTs are introduced. How do ICTs change the way teachers teach? How do pupils respond to ICTs-enhanced teaching?

Research from the Open University, UK, highlights DEEP (the Digital Education Enhancement Project), a new project funded by the Department for International Development, that is helping teachers use ICT to improve teaching and learning in primary schools. Although still in its infancy, the project already shows that the impact of using ICTs extends further than pupil achievement and classroom practice to also benefit teachers’ professional identities and the community as a whole.

In the Eastern Cape, DEEP is working with 12 disadvantaged primary schools, the majority of which are rural, three have no electricity and four have no telephone connection. The project uses rechargeable laptops (small, lightweight computers) and relevant websites on CD-ROM to help teachers where they have to overcome problems of poor or fragile infrastructure.

A pair of teachers from each of the schools has been given training materials such as website mediated activities and study guides. At workshops, they tried out a variety of curriculum focused ICTs activities such as researching scientific information about endangered species, or writing illustrated autobiographies. As teachers discover new ICTs-enhanced teaching methods, they present them to colleagues from other project schools in the region. For example, one teacher created an animated folk tale in Xhosa and English to support literacy work. Each project pair shares a laptop computer and each teacher has a hand-held computer supporting electronic books as well as video and audio files that focus on teaching strategies. Additional equipment such as digital cameras was introduced gradually in order to avoid ‘technology overload’. Most of the project teachers meet regularly in informal groups for additional support.

Prior to the project, 16 of the 24 teachers had never used a computer but after four months they all considered ICTs important or very important for learning and felt confident in their use of ICTs.

The researchers also found that:

DEEP highlights the potential of ICTs for transforming teacher development and learning, as well as professional support. The project also makes the following policy implications:

Source(s):
‘Building teachers’ professional knowledge through ICT: experience and analysis across the "digital divide"’, presented at the European Conference on Educational Research, Lisbon, by J. Leach, R. Moon and T. Power, September 2002 Full document.
'Missing the connection? Using ICTs in education' Insights Education #1

id21 Research Highlight: 1 March 2003

Further Information:
Jenny Leach
Centre for Research and Development in Teacher Education
Faculty of Education and Language Studies
Open University
Walton Hall
Offices IX, Level 3
Milton Keynes
MK7 6AA
UK

Contact the contributor: J.Leach@open.ac.uk

The Digital Education Enhancement Project (DEEP), UK

Other related links:
See the id21 links page on Information and Communication Technologies in Education

Views expressed on these pages are not necessarily those of DfID, IDS, id21 or other contributing institutions. Articles featured on the id21 site may be copied or quoted without restriction provided id21 and originating author(s) and institution(s) are acknowledged. Copyright © 2009 IDS. All rights reserved.

id21 is funded by the UK Department for International Development. id21 is one of a family of knowledge services at the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex. id21 is a www.oneworld.net partner and an affiliate of www.mediachannel.org. IDS is a charitable company, No. 877338.