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Evaluating Technology in Teacher Education - Lessons From the Preparing Tomorrow's Teachers for Technology (PT3) Program (Paperback, New)
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Evaluating Technology in Teacher Education - Lessons From the Preparing Tomorrow's Teachers for Technology (PT3) Program (Paperback, New)
Series: Research, Innovation and Methods in Educational Technology
Expected to ship within 18 - 22 working days
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A volume in Research Methods in Educational Technology Series
Editor Walter F. Heinecke, University of Virginia Overall we come
away from this project with a renewed sense of the complexity of
evaluating the implementation and impact of technology in teacher
education. In the post-PT3 period the federal government turned to
large-scale experimental and quasi-experimental evaluations of
educational technology but these have produced little in the way of
understanding what types of technology work in various content
areas under various conditions. PT3 and its approach to evaluation
can be viewed as the pioneering period of educational technology
evaluation in teacher education. It was a time when evaluators were
just beginning to develop appropriate standards that could be used
as evaluation criteria. It was a time when the accumulated wisdom
of the evaluation field with regards to the primacy of mixedmethods
and multiple indicators of outcomes was just beginning to take
hold. PT3 evaluators understood the importance of treading the line
between summative and formative evaluation, and the relationship of
evaluation to the improvement of educational practice. In a world
where the policymakers now clamor for simple quantitative
evaluations linking teacher preparation to pupil achievement
scores, we are reminded that the causal chain from teacher
preparation to inservice performance and student achievement is
fraught with externalities, complexities and a less than equal
playing field. Collectively we still have not figured out how
technology may be adding value to education beyond any potential
impact on superficial standardized test scores. We have as a
nation, ignored the call of cognitive psychologists who in 2000
called for a new frame of reference for learner-centered,
community-centered, assessment- centered and content-centered
educational processes. They understood that the high stakes
accountability systems hinder educational innovation and the
release of technology's potential to unlock new ways of knowing and
learning. Looking back now on the accomplishments of the PT3
program within our current political context, we see a need for
more nuanced evaluation models that examine the relationship
between pedagogy and technology integration, with a realization
that teacher preparation programs will vary in their approaches to
both. Some will focus on skills-based approaches, others on the
relationship between pedagogical content knowledge and technology
integration. The PT3 program served as an important incubator and
test-bed of appropriate evaluation practice; we are already looking
back at the program for lessons on how to move forward. We hope
this volume may serve as a reminder of lessons for the future.
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