1 / 19

Evaluation and Benchmarking of ICT in Schools

Evaluation and Benchmarking of ICT in Schools. Professor Paul Bacsich UK 17 October 2003. Acknowledgement. The Education and Manpower Bureau would like to offer special thanks to Professor Paul Bacsich for his powerpoint presentation on Evaluation and Benchmarking of ICT in Schools.

oshin
Download Presentation

Evaluation and Benchmarking of ICT in Schools

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Evaluation and Benchmarking of ICT in Schools Professor Paul Bacsich UK 17 October 2003

  2. Acknowledgement The Education and Manpower Bureau would like to offer special thanks to Professor Paul Bacsichfor his powerpoint presentation on Evaluation and Benchmarking of ICT in Schools

  3. Evaluation In 4 easy lessons

  4. Evaluation • Programme-wide with deep drill-down • Based on numbers and qualitative info, with interpretation • Triangulation and stakeholders

  5. Flashlight (after Ehrmann) • See www.tltgroup.org • And the Flashlight presentation at www.roundtable.ac.uk/FLIntro.ppt

  6. The Flashlight Oath • "Above all, I will do no harm. I know the value of people's time, and so I will be ruthless in making my surveys and interviews focused, brief, and useful…so that those who have answered my questions will be even more willing to collaborate with the next researcher or evaluator who contacts them." • "My study's process as well as its findings will stimulate reflection and learning…"

  7. Programme evaluation in UK • Based on Flashlight • Developed in the Annenberg/CPB trials of e-learning in HE c. 1995 • and the OU evaluation consensus • (Bates, Mason, Laurillard et al) • First substantial trial in the JANUS evaluations of 1993-5 • Refined through TERG (SHU) into a tool for evaluation of NLN • Next set of slides are c/o Ash, Carter and Mistry

  8. NLN-e1 Findings • ICT is only appreciated by students when there is a reason for it • ICT is an increasingly effective tool that is used with increasing sophistication and appreciation • Increasing ICT skills at schools is pressurising teacher skills at FE • Involvement in evaluation can facilitate colleges. organisational development

  9. Evaluation successes • A further £84M funding for the skills sector • DFeS are pushing the toolkit to evaluate courses • Furthered thought in the identification of good practice • Helping to raise awareness of the issues in the pedagogy of ICT teaching

  10. What is UK doing for the second phase of NLN evaluation • Meta-analysis of current and recent surveys • Quantitative data gathering from across the sector • Twelve In-depth longitudinal studies developed by external evaluators • Focus on the whole organisation rather than the course

  11. What did Phase one tell us about conducting internal evaluations? • Tools and processes are often secondary to good management • The process of reviewing and assessing work can be threatening and evoke a deeply political response • Evaluations serve multiple functions not always those the evaluators envisage

  12. Conducting the evaluation Data collection • Leave your baggage at the door • Pilot everything • ALWAYS double check and share insights with your informants • Look from multiple viewpoints • Don’t over-gather the same information from the same sources

  13. Benchmarking Not an easy subject

  14. Benchmarking – but who with? • Similar countries/regions – but who is? • Leaders, to provide aspirational role models • Laggards in case they catch up!

  15. Criteria • Population • And population density • Type of language (alphabet, ideographic, etc) • Level of use of ICT in general life • (Pedagogic) culture

  16. Suggestions • Singapore • Scotland not England • Canadian (province level) • Denmark not Finland • Australia (states) • Thailand (laggard but trying to catch up) • South Korea? • US – are we sure?

  17. ICT findings Key ratios

  18. Key Performance Indicators • Students per PC • Bandwidth per student PC • Or per student (aspirational?) • Media sophistication of software • Text, graphics, web, audio, video • Production to consumption ratio

  19. Spot emerging trends even if small • Laptops/tablets are less intrusive and fit the paradigm of “ubiquitous computing” • Binding of home PCs into school systems: ”extranets” • Hosting: moving servers out of schools back to server farms • New “worldware” apps? • Email integration with SMS on mobile phones?? • Anything coming in from HE (Grid?) or industry (cooperative working) or real life (games?)

More Related