Understanding the influence of Teachers’ Beliefs and Professional Dispositions on Technology use in South African Secondary Schools before and during COVID

Suzanne Sackstein, M. Matthee, Lizette Weilbach
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Abstract

Those advocating for technology integration within education claim that teachers need to reform their pedagogic practices to make learning more engaging and relevant. While educational technology researchers claim teachers are primarily responsible for these failures, it seems teachers do not embrace technology unquestionably. This paper aims to develop an understanding of how teachers’ beliefs and professional dispositions (PDs) influence technology use within different social and educational contexts. A set of three interviews were conducted at four South African secondary schools with vastly different social contexts, over different periods of time (before and during COVID) with cross-case analyses. Findings show that the provision of technology does not guarantee integration as use varies amongst teachers within technology-rich schools, with teachers who hold more positive Internal Beliefs (IBs) of technology not only focusing less on External Structure (ES) barriers, but also utilising technology in more varied ways, even to enhance and transform their pedagogic practices. Furthermore, teachers’ PDs seem to exist on a continuum and do not appear to be the sole influencer of technology use, with the context alongside the school’s technology policy and related technology structures influencing teachers’ IBs and resulting technology use. In addition, while mandatory use of technology during COVID led to more positive IBs as teachers understood the value of the technology, this only appears to be true if external structures (ESs) supported the learners as well. Moreover, all teachers expressed their belief that technology is no replacement for face-to-face teaching. Finally, the rich data from the interviews underlined the intricacies of factors influencing the use of technology in classrooms, indicating a need for a meta-theory to gain a holistic understanding of technology use by teachers.
了解在COVID之前和期间教师的信仰和专业倾向对南非中学技术使用的影响
那些倡导在教育中整合技术的人声称,教师需要改革他们的教学实践,使学习更具吸引力和相关性。虽然教育技术研究人员声称教师对这些失败负有主要责任,但教师似乎并没有毫无疑问地接受技术。本文旨在了解教师的信仰和专业倾向(pd)如何影响不同社会和教育背景下的技术使用。在不同时期(COVID之前和期间),在社会背景截然不同的四所南非中学进行了三次访谈,并进行了跨案例分析。研究结果表明,技术的提供并不能保证整合,因为在技术丰富的学校里,教师的使用情况各不相同,对技术持有更积极的内在信念(ib)的教师不仅较少关注外部结构(ES)障碍,而且还以更多样化的方式利用技术,甚至可以增强和改变他们的教学实践。此外,教师的个人发展倾向似乎存在于一个连续体中,似乎并不是技术使用的唯一影响因素,学校的技术政策和相关的技术结构都影响着教师的个人发展倾向和由此产生的技术使用。此外,虽然在COVID期间强制使用技术导致了更积极的ib,因为教师了解技术的价值,但这似乎只有在外部结构(ESs)也支持学习者的情况下才能实现。此外,所有教师都表示,他们认为技术不能取代面对面的教学。最后,来自访谈的丰富数据强调了影响课堂技术使用的因素的复杂性,表明需要一种元理论来全面了解教师的技术使用情况。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
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