Information Literacy in the Laptop ClassroomErstpublikation in: Teachers College Record Volume 109, Number 11, November 2007, pp. 2511-2540
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Zusammenfassungen
Background/Context: Technological and economic changes have put a high premium on
developing students’ information literacy and research skills. Previous attempts to deploy
educational technology toward these ends have proved disappointing because K–12 teachers
have difficulty integrating shared computers into instruction. In response, numerous schools
and districts have piloted one-to-one programs, in which each student has access to a laptop
computer connected wirelessly to the Internet throughout the school day.
Purpose/Objective: This paper analyzes the information literacy and research practice in a purposely stratified selection of 10 one-to-one laptop K–12 schools in California and Maine. Research Design/Data Collection and Analysis: Sources of data in this multisite case study include observations, interviews, surveys, and teacher- and student-produced materials.
Findings/Results: The study found that students in all the laptop schools learned to access information, manage it, and incorporate in into their written and multimedia products. However, the focus on evaluating information, understanding the social issues surrounding it, and analyzing it for the purpose of knowledge production varied widely across schools. Some schools succeeded in promoting scholarly approaches to working with information, whereas other schools mostly limited themselves to teaching procedural functions of computer and Internet use. Examples of these differences are given through a comparison of three diverse schools in Maine.
Conclusions/Recommendations: The study concludes that one-to-one wireless laptops offer important affordances for promoting information literacy and research skills but that socioeconomic context, visions, values, and beliefs all play a critical role in shaping how laptop programs are implemented and what benefits are thus achieved.
Von Klappentext im Text Information Literacy in the Laptop Classroom (2007) Purpose/Objective: This paper analyzes the information literacy and research practice in a purposely stratified selection of 10 one-to-one laptop K–12 schools in California and Maine. Research Design/Data Collection and Analysis: Sources of data in this multisite case study include observations, interviews, surveys, and teacher- and student-produced materials.
Findings/Results: The study found that students in all the laptop schools learned to access information, manage it, and incorporate in into their written and multimedia products. However, the focus on evaluating information, understanding the social issues surrounding it, and analyzing it for the purpose of knowledge production varied widely across schools. Some schools succeeded in promoting scholarly approaches to working with information, whereas other schools mostly limited themselves to teaching procedural functions of computer and Internet use. Examples of these differences are given through a comparison of three diverse schools in Maine.
Conclusions/Recommendations: The study concludes that one-to-one wireless laptops offer important affordances for promoting information literacy and research skills but that socioeconomic context, visions, values, and beliefs all play a critical role in shaping how laptop programs are implemented and what benefits are thus achieved.
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Nicht erwähnte Begriffe | LehrerIn, Notebooks an Schulen, Unterricht |
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5 Erwähnungen
- Ubiquitous Computing in K-12 Classrooms - A Systematic Review (Edward C. Bethel, Robert M. Bernard, Philip C. Abrami, Anne C. Wade) (2008)
- Integration von Tablet PCs im Rahmen des Medieneinsatzes einer gymnasialen Oberstufe - Endbericht (Björn Eric Stolpmann, Stefan Welling) (2009)
- New Technology and Digital Worlds - Analyzing Evidence of Equity in Access, Use, and Outcomes (2010)
- ICILS 2013 - Computer- und informationsbezogene Kompetenzen von Schülerinnen und Schülern in der 8. Jahrgangsstufe im internationalen Vergleich (Wilfried Bos, Birgit Eickelmann, Julia Gerick, Frank Goldhammer, Heike Schaumburg, Knut Schwippert, Martin Senkbeil, Renate Schulz-Zander, Heike Wendt) (2014)
- Tomorrow's Learning: Involving Everyone. Learning with and about Technologies and Computing - 11th IFIP TC 3 World Conference on Computers in Education, WCCE 2017, Dublin, Ireland, July 3-6, 2017 (Arthur Tatnall, Mary Webb) (2017)
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