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El. knyga: Preparing for Life in a Digital Age: The IEA International Computer and Information Literacy Study International Report

  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Dec-2014
  • Leidėjas: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319142227
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Dec-2014
  • Leidėjas: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319142227

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Ability to use information and communication technologies (ICT) is an imperative for effective participation in todays digital age. Schools worldwide are responding to the need to provide young people with that ability. But how effective are they in this regard? The IEA International Computer and Information Literacy Study (ICILS) responded to this question by studying the extent to which young people have developed computer and information literacy (CIL), which is defined as the ability to use computers to investigate, create and communicate with others at home, school, the workplace and in society.

The study was conducted under the auspices of the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement (IEA) and builds on a series of earlier IEA studies focusing on ICT in education.

Data were gathered from almost 60,000 Grade 8 students in more than 3,300 schools from 21 education systems. This information was augmented by data from almost 35,000 teachers in those schools and by contextual data collected from school ICT-coordinators, school principals and the ICILS national research centers.

The IEA ICILS team systematically investigated differences among the participating countries in students CIL outcomes, how participating countries were providing CIL-related education and how confident teachers were in using ICT in their pedagogical practice. The team also explored differences within and across countries with respect to relationships between CIL education outcomes and student characteristics and school contexts.

In general, the study findings presented in this international report challenge the notion of young people as digital natives with a self-developed capacity to use digital technology. The large variations in CIL proficiency within and across the ICILS countries suggest it is naive to expect young people to develop CIL in the absence of coherent learning programs. Findings also indicate that system- and school-level planning needs to focus on increasing teacher expertise in using ICT for pedagogical purposes if such programs are to have the desired effect.

The report furthermore presents an empirically derived scale and description of CIL learning that educational stakeholders can reference when deliberating about CIL education and use to monitor change in CIL over time.

Daugiau informacijos

This is an open access book, the electronic versions are freely accessible online.
Foreword iii
List of Tables and Figures
ix
Executive Summary 15(12)
About the study
15(1)
Data
16(1)
Computer and information literacy
17(3)
The construct
17(1)
Assessing computer and information literacy
17(1)
The computer and information literacy scale
18(2)
Variations in student achievement on the CIL scale
20(1)
Variations across countries
20(1)
Factors associated with variations in CIL
20(1)
Student use of ICT
21(1)
Computer use outside school
21(1)
Use of ICT for school work
22(1)
Teacher and school use of ICT
22(2)
Teacher use of ICT
22(1)
School-based ICT provision and use
23(1)
Conclusion
24(3)
Chapter 1 Introduction
27(20)
Background
28(4)
Research questions
32(1)
Participating countries, population, and sample design
33(1)
Population definitions
33(1)
Sample design
34(1)
The ICILS assessment framework
34(8)
The computer and information literacy framework
34(1)
The ICILS contextual framework
35(3)
The wider community level
38(1)
The national (system) level
39(1)
School/classroom level
40(1)
Home level
41(1)
Individual level
42(1)
Data collection and ICILS instruments
42(2)
Report context and scope
44(3)
Chapter 2 The Contexts for Education on Computer and Information Literacy
47(22)
Introduction
47(1)
Collecting data on contexts for CIL education
47(2)
Characteristics of the education systems in participating ICILS countries
49(5)
Infrastructure and resources for education in CIL
54(2)
Approaches to CIL education in ICILS countries
56(11)
Conclusion
67(2)
Chapter 3 Students' Computer and Information Literacy
69(32)
Assessing CIL
69(3)
The CIL described achievement scale
72(4)
Example ICILS test items
76(18)
The five discrete task items
76(10)
Example ICILS large-task item
86(8)
Comparison of CIL across countries
94(5)
Distribution of student achievement scores
94(1)
CIL relative to the ICT Development Index and national student-computer ratios
94(1)
Pair-wise comparisons of CIL
95(4)
Achievement across countries with respect to proficiency levels
99(1)
Conclusion
99(2)
Chapter 4 The Influence of Students' Personal and Home Background on Computer and Information Literacy
101(24)
Gender and CIL
102(1)
Home background indicators and CIL
102(14)
Educational aspirations
102(2)
Socioeconomic background
104(7)
Immigrant status and language use
111(2)
Home ICT resources
113(3)
Influence of combined home background variables on CIL
116(7)
Conclusion
123(2)
Chapter 5 Students' Use of and Engagement with ICT at Home and School
125(42)
Introduction
125(1)
ICT at home and school
125(2)
Familiarity with computers
127(5)
Experience with using computers
127(1)
Frequency of computer use
128(4)
Student use of computers outside school
132(14)
Computer-based applications used outside school
132(3)
Internet use for communication and exchange of information
135(7)
Computer use for recreation
142(4)
Computer use for and at school
146(10)
School-related use of computers
146(1)
Extent of use for particular school-related purposes
146(5)
Use of computers in subject areas
151(2)
Learning about computer and information literacy at school
153(3)
Student perceptions of ICT
156(8)
ICT self-efficacy
156(5)
Student interest and enjoyment in using computers and computing
161(3)
Associations between perceptions and achievement
164(1)
Conclusion
164(3)
Chapter 6 School Environments for Teaching and Learning Computer and Information Literacy
167(28)
Introduction
167(1)
Schools' access to ICT resources
168(8)
School policies and practices for using ICT
176(4)
Perceptions of school ICT learning environments
180(7)
Teachers' professional development in using ICT for pedagogical purposes
187(5)
School perspectives
187(3)
Teacher perspectives
190(2)
Conclusion
192(3)
Chapter 7 Teaching with and about Information and Communication Technologies
195(34)
Introduction
195(1)
Background
195(2)
Teachers' familiarity with ICT
197(2)
Experience with and use of computers
197(2)
Teachers' views about ICT
199(9)
Benefits of ICT in school education
199(7)
Confidence in using ICT
206(2)
Associations between ICT use and teachers' views
208(2)
Teaching with and about ICT
210(5)
Prevalence of ICT use
213(2)
Developing computer and information literacy
215(6)
Factors associated with emphasis on developing CIL
217(4)
The ICT tools teachers were using
221(6)
Types of tools
221(1)
Use in learning activities
222(2)
Use in teaching practices
224(3)
Conclusion
227(2)
Chapter 8 Investigating Variations in Computer and Information Literacy
229(16)
A model for explaining variation in CIL
229(5)
Influences on variation in CIL
234(6)
Student-level influences
234(2)
School-level influences
236(2)
Student-level and school-level background influences
238(2)
Summary of influences on CIL
240(3)
Conclusion
243(2)
Chapter 9 Conclusions and Discussion
245(14)
ICILS guiding questions
246(1)
Student proficiency in using computers
246(4)
The computer and information literacy (CIL) scale
246(4)
Student achievement on the CIL scale
250(1)
Students' computer use and CIL
250(2)
Computer use outside school
251(1)
Use of ICT for school work preparing for life in a digital age
252(1)
Students' perceptions of ICT
252(1)
Teacher, school, and education system characteristics relevant to CIL
253(2)
General approaches to CIL education
253(1)
Teachers and CIL
253(1)
Schools and CIL
254(1)
Results from the multivariate analyses
255(1)
Reflections on policy and practice
255(3)
Future directions for research
258(1)
Appendices
259(40)
Appendix A Samples and participation rates
261(3)
Appendix B Percentage correct by country for example large task scoring criteria
264(9)
Appendix C Percentiles and standard deviations for computer and information literacy
273(2)
Appendix D The scaling of ICILS questionnaire items
275(2)
Appendix E Item-by-score maps
277(17)
Appendix F Effects of indicators of missing school and teacher data
294(1)
Appendix G Organizations and individuals involved in ICILS
295(4)
References 299