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This open access publication outlines the underlying framework for
gathering data on civic knowledge, attitudes, and engagement as
well as contextual information, and it describes the assessment
design for the International Association for the Evaluation of
Educational Achievement’s (IEA) International Civic and
Citizenship Education Study 2022. The IEA International Civic and
Citizenship Study (ICCS) investigates how young people are prepared
to undertake their roles as citizens in a range of countries in the
second decade of the 21st century. ICCS 2022 is a continuation of
two earlier IEA studies, ICCS 2009 and ICCS 2016, and, for the
first time, this survey includes the option of a computer-based
assessment. Responding to enduring and emerging challenges of
educating young people in a world where contexts of democracy and
civic participation continue to change, the study addresses issues
related to young people’s engagement through digital
technologies, migration and diversity, perceptions of the political
system, global citizenship, and education for sustainable
development. Over the past 50 years, IEA has conducted comparative
research studies in a range of domains focusing on educational
policies, practices, and outcomes in many countries around the
world. Prior to ICCS 2022, IEA conducted four international
comparative studies of civic and citizenship education, with a
first survey implemented in 1971, a second one in 1999, third in
2009 and fourth in 2016. ICCS 2022 data will allow education
systems to evaluate the strengths of educational policies, both
internationally, and in a regional context, and to measure progress
in achieving critical components of their educational policy
agendas.
Ability to use information and communication technologies (ICT) is
an imperative for effective participation in today's 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.
This open access publication outlines the underlying framework for
gathering data on civic knowledge, attitudes, and engagement as
well as contextual information, and it describes the assessment
design for the International Association for the Evaluation of
Educational Achievement’s (IEA) International Civic and
Citizenship Education Study 2022. The IEA International Civic and
Citizenship Study (ICCS) investigates how young people are prepared
to undertake their roles as citizens in a range of countries in the
second decade of the 21st century. ICCS 2022 is a continuation of
two earlier IEA studies, ICCS 2009 and ICCS 2016, and, for the
first time, this survey includes the option of a computer-based
assessment. Responding to enduring and emerging challenges of
educating young people in a world where contexts of democracy and
civic participation continue to change, the study addresses issues
related to young people’s engagement through digital
technologies, migration and diversity, perceptions of the political
system, global citizenship, and education for sustainable
development. Over the past 50 years, IEA has conducted comparative
research studies in a range of domains focusing on educational
policies, practices, and outcomes in many countries around the
world. Prior to ICCS 2022, IEA conducted four international
comparative studies of civic and citizenship education, with a
first survey implemented in 1971, a second one in 1999, third in
2009 and fourth in 2016. ICCS 2022 data will allow education
systems to evaluate the strengths of educational policies, both
internationally, and in a regional context, and to measure progress
in achieving critical components of their educational policy
agendas.
This Open Access book summarizes the key findings from the second
cycle of IEA's International Computer and Information Literacy
Study (ICILS), conducted in 2018. ICILS seeks to establish how well
schools around the globe are responding to the need to provide
young people with the necessary digital participatory competencies.
Effective use of information and communication technologies (ICT)
is an imperative for successful participation in an increasingly
digital world. ICILS 2018 explores international differences in
students' computer and information literacy (CIL), namely their
ability to use computers to investigate, create, and communicate at
home, at school, in the workplace, and in the community.
Participating countries also had an option to administer an
assessment of students' computational thinking (CT), focused on
their ability to recognize aspects of real-world problems
appropriate for computational formulation, and to evaluate and
develop algorithmic solutions to those problems, so that the
solutions could be operationalized with a computer. The data
collected by ICILS 2018 show how digital competencies can be
assessed using instruments representing authentic contexts for ICT
use, and how students' CIL and CT skills relate to school learning
experiences, out-of-school contexts, and student characteristics.
Those data also show how learning technologies are used in
classrooms around the world. Background questionnaires asked
students about their use of ICT, and collected information from
teachers, schools, and national education systems about the
resourcing and teaching of CIL (and CT) within their countries. The
results of ICILS 2018 will enable policymakers and education
systems to develop a better understanding of the contexts and
outcomes of CIL (and CT) education programs.
Das Buch untersucht am Beispiel Venezuelas, welche Faktoren das
Wahlverhalten beeinflussen. Es zeigt sich, dass in Venezuela
Parteibindungen und das Wahlverhalten stark von Parteipatronage und
Populismus gepragt sind."
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