Somekh, Bridget and Lewin, Cathy (2008) Information and communication technologies and the culture of schooling: understanding innovation and designing research for radical reform. Information Technology, Education and Society, 9 (2). pp. 49-64. ISSN 1037-616X
File not available for download.Abstract
This article draws on research in England into the use of interactive whiteboards and other information and communication technologies in education. It uses socio-cultural theories to analyse the barriers and enablers to creative and transformative use of ICT in primary schools, secondary schools and young people’s homes. The contrasting practices observable in these three activity systems illuminate the power of these theories in understanding how social practices, including pedagogy, are enacted and sustained through established traditions and structures; and how ICT tools do not of themselves mediate transformation, but depend on the development of new social practices that make creative use of their affordances. The article suggests that the current ‘crisis’ in the education system in England has brought it to the tipping point for transformation. It calls on researchers to engage in a new kind of dialogue with policy makers and teachers, and to use the models and tools provided by socio-cultural theories to design research interventions to transform pedagogical practice in collaboration with teachers.
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