2003
DOI: 10.1111/1467-8535.00315
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Editorial: Rhetoric and reality—the present and future of ICT in education

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Cited by 21 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…ICT mediated course delivery is increasingly seen as a desirable and cost effective means of reaching large numbers of teachers (Nichol & Watson, 2003;Postle, 2002;Vance & McKinnon, 2002) but this requires that the target audience has access to the necessary ICT infrastructure. The findings of this study suggest that adequate access is far from universal among teachers and that technical support is the area of greatest need.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…ICT mediated course delivery is increasingly seen as a desirable and cost effective means of reaching large numbers of teachers (Nichol & Watson, 2003;Postle, 2002;Vance & McKinnon, 2002) but this requires that the target audience has access to the necessary ICT infrastructure. The findings of this study suggest that adequate access is far from universal among teachers and that technical support is the area of greatest need.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Professional development for teachers is widely recognised as one of the highest priorities for the school sector (Dede & Honan, 2005;Meiers & Ingvarson, 2005) and educational writers are increasingly advocating ICT mediated course delivery as a means of serving large, geographically dispersed populations of already busy teachers (e.g., Nichol & Watson, 2003;Vance & McKinnon, 2002). Professional development for teachers has long been offered in a variety of ways, with university accredited, postgraduate studies being an important component (Harvey, 2005;Meiers & Ingvarson, 2005) ICT mediated postgraduate courses are widely believed to offer benefits far beyond that of greater convenience of time and location (Carswell, Thomas, Richards, Price & Petre, 2000;Haddad, 2002;Postle, 2002).…”
Section: Ict Access For Continuing Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The rapid advances in information and communications technologies (ICTs) have acted as a catalyst for educational transformation in recent years the world over (Nichol & Watson, 2003). Africa is also attempting to take advantage of this technological revolution in order to make strides in the advancement of education (Selinger, 2002;Isaacs et al, 2004;Shrestha, 2000).…”
Section: Towards Blended Learning Solutions For Africamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In accordance with it, the use of ICT to improve teaching and learning in schools in the United Kingdom has been clearly emphasised over the last decade (Taylor, 2004;Haydn and Barton, 2007). UK teachers have been promoted to use ICT for their teaching and to enable pupils to gain competencies in ICT within all subject fields (Cuckle ,Clarke and Jenkins, 2000).However, research on the use of ICT in UK schools points out that there has not been a considerable increase on uptake in teachers" use of new technology (Harrison et al 2002;Nichol & Watson 2003;Reynolds et al 2003;Selwyn 2003) According to Kenneth Baker (1988), initial training courses would initiate these skills of using ICT "the problem of getting teachers aware of IT will soon be phased out as all new entrants will soon have IT expertise" (as cited in Barton & Haydn,2006, p. 258). Nevertheless, there has been concern regarding the competency of student teachers" effective use of ICT in their teaching (Willis & Mehlinger, 1996).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%