Concept of ICT
Concept of ICT
Concept of ICT
It depends on the local culture and the particular ICT available and how it is
configured and managed. The understanding, management and configuration
of the available technology might vary the concept of ICT from
a collection of tools and devices used for particular tasks, eg,
publishing, course delivery, transaction processing...
an organised set of equipment (like a 'workshop') for working
on information and communication
components of integrated arrangements of devices, tools,
services and practices that enable information to be collected,
processed, stored and shared with others
components in a comprehensive system of people, information
and devices that enables learning, problem solving and higher order
collaborative thinking, that is, ICT as key elements underpinning a
(sharable) workspace.
Creativity or Productivity?
Creativity Productivity
quality assurance quality control
learning tools teaching machines
standards Standardisation
participative
(people) interactive (ICT)
creative Predictable
building
delivering content
community
Stephen also reports that using ICT to support creativity is commonly found
in small, democratic, high value economies focused on smartening up.
Conversely economies that are large and low value (focused on minimising
costs including labour costs) tend to be focused on using ICT to support
productivity (at least in the short term).
-INFORMATION
-COMMUNICATIONS
-TECHNOLOGY
A good way to think about ICT is to consider all the uses of digital
technology that already exist to help individuals, businesses and
organisations use information.
ICT covers any product that will store, retrieve, manipulate, transmit or
receive information electronically in a digital form. For example,
personal computers, digital television, email, robots.
In this book, these three definitions have been collapsed into a single, all
encompassing, definition of ICT. This definition implies that ICT will be
used, applied, and integrated in activities of working and learning on the
basis of conceptual understanding and methods of informatics.
UNESCO aims to ensure that all countries, both developed and developing,
have access to the best educational facilities necessary to prepare young
people to play full roles in modern society and to contribute to a knowledge
nation. Because of the fundamental importance of ICT in the task of schools
today, UNESCO has previously published books in this area as a practical
means of helping Member States: for example, Informatics for Secondary
Education: A Curriculum for Schools (1994) and Informatics for
Primary Education (2000). Rapid developments in ICT now demand a
completely new document in place of the first of these publications.
This book has two key purposes. The first is to specify a curriculum in ICT
for secondary schools that is in line with current international trends. The
second purpose is to outline a programme of professional development for
teachers necessary to implement the specified ICT curriculum successfully.
9
ICT AND EDUCATION
All governments aim to provide the most comprehensive education possible
for their citizens within the constraints of available finance. Because of the
pivotal position of ICT in modern societies, its introduction into secondary
schools will be high on any political agenda. This book gives a practical and
realistic approach to curriculum and teacher development that can be
implemented quickly and cost effectively, according to available resources.
Availability of resources
In this book, these three definitions have been collapsed into a single, all
encompassing, definition of ICT. This definition implies that ICT will be
used, applied, and integrated in activities of working and learning on the
basis of conceptual understanding and methods of informatics.
13
ICT AND EDUCATION
14
STAGES OF TEACHING AND LEARNING
Teaching and learning are best thought of, not as separate and independent
activities, but rather as two sides of the same coin, interconnected and
interrelated. Studies of teaching and learning in schools around the world
identify four broad stages in the way that teachers and students learn about
and gain confidence in the use of ICT. These four stages give rise to the
model depicted in Figure 2.2 that shows the stages in terms of discovering,
learning how, understanding how and when, and specializing in the use of
ICT tools.
The first stage (Stage A in Figure 2.2) that teachers and learners go through
in ICT development is of discovering ICT tools and their general functions
and uses. In this discovery stage, there is usually an emphasis on ICT
literacy and basic skills. This stage of discovering ICT tools is linked with
the emerging approach in ICT development.
Characteristics
Along with approaches to ICT development noted above, there are various
characteristics of schools, or aspects of school leadership, that relate to a
school‘s progress in ICT development. Below are general descriptions of the
Vision
Vision refers to the aspirations and goals of both individuals within a school
and the school system as a whole. As the school advances, the mission
statements should become clearer and provide a basis for decision-making.
Mission statements should help individual members of the learning
community visualize a school‘s aspirations for the future and act in
harmony.
Ways in which teachers and students interact and how the school is managed
for learning are part of what is meant by a school‘s philosophy of learning
and 3
ICT DEVELOPMENT AT THE SCHOOL LEVEL
24
ICT IN EDUCATION
A CURRICULUM AND PROGRAMME OF TEACHER DEVELOPMENT
ICT tools and resources are selected by students in ways that match the aims
of a project best. These contrasting approaches to pedagogy are sometimes
referred to as instructivist and constructivist respectively.
How a school's vision and teaching philosophies are carried out is translated
into development plans and policies. In the detailed steps of such plans
and policies, goals and objectives are further defined providing interim and
Community involvement
Assessment