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How do Digital Immigrant Teachers (DITs) learn ICT for the information age?

conference contribution
posted on 2004-01-01, 00:00 authored by Natalie Senjov-Makohon
This study reports about teacher learning and in particular, teachers who have extensive teaching experience but limited ICT knowledge and skills. The Digital Immigrant Teachers (DITs) grew up before digital technologies; they are not frequently confident or comfortable with ICT. Like all immigrants, they have to learn new and creative ways to enhance their survival in the third millennium, where the acceleration of knowledge has allowed communication and application of information to be rapidly disseminated. In order to fully participate in the technologically rich society DITs must actively engage in the construction of authentic and purposeful learning. This research came about as a result of the digital immigrants' struggles to construct and acquire the necessary knowledge and skills to teach in the Knowledge Economy and the Information Age. The experienced present day teachers, as digital immigrants are trying to teach digital natives (Prensky, 2001 & 2003). And in order to assist these teachers in their learning ICT struggle, it is imperative to understand the teacher learning process, and the learning style through which they acquire the knowledge and skills for this new milieu.

History

Location

Melbourne, Victoria

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1.1 Full written paper - refereed

Editor/Contributor(s)

P Jeffrey

Pagination

1 - 16

Start date

2004-11-28

End date

2004-12-02

Title of proceedings

AARE 2004 : Doing the public good : positioning educational research ; International Education Research conference proceedings

Event

Australian Association for Research in Education. Conference (2004 : Melbourne, Victoria)

Publisher

Australian Association for Research in Education

Place of publication

Melbourne, Vic.

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