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PEDAGOGICAL INTEGRATION OF ICTS IN UGANDAN EDUCATION
INSTITUTIONS
By Alice Ndidde, Jude Lubega
Daniel Babikwa & Grace Baguma
Makerere University
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 2
Background, Aim and ObjectivesThe PanAfrican Research Agenda Project is a multi-institutional
partnership project with a focus on tertiary level research institutions, attached to universities in participating countries.
It aims to better understand how the pedagogical integration of ICTs can improve the quality of teaching and learning in Africa.
SpecificallyThe objectives of the research in Uganda were:• To generate baseline data on the research indicators (Equipment,
access and connectivity; Teacher training; ICT Use for teaching and learning; Impact of ICT on educators and learners; Institutional Management, e.t.c.)
• Recommend policy and practical responses to the identified gaps and challenges
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 3
Methodology• The design was both quantitative and qualitative:• A mixed methods approach was used in the collection of data which
consisted of:– self administered questionnaires, – one on one interviews,– focus group discussions– observation and review of documents
• Eleven educational institutions were included in this study of which;– five (5) were primary schools, – four (4) secondary schools and – two (2) teacher training institutions
• All the institutions were of mixed gender except one which was a girls’ only secondary school
• The institutions were purposively selected from rural, semi urban and urban areas of Uganda.
• Eight of the institutions were public and only three private
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 4
Research ResultsNational ICT Policies and pedagogical integration
Several ICT policies exist:• Broadcasting 2007, Communication 2007, East African e-Government
Strategy 2005, National ICT Master Plan Final Report 2006, Uganda Country-based Research, Policy Support and Advocacy Partnerships for Pro-Poor ICT
The above do not have a direct relationship on education improvement.
However, the draft ICT Policy for Uganda (2008) was found to have a direct relationship on education improvement.
In the areas of:
• Teacher training , making the use of IT mandatory at all levels of educational Institutions, developing relevant IT curricula for the primary,
secondary and tertiary institutions.
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 5
Research Results Contd..Equipment, access and connectivity
The study established that:• The studied institutions were trying their best to provide the necessary ICT
equipment and infrastructure,
BUTThe ratio of students to computers was still very high especially in public
primary schools with none below 1:15
• Access to computers by educators and administrators was also limited
• Educators in particular had to share computers with learners in all institutions apart from one tertiary institution (DAECS) where all lecturers had access to computers in their offices
• However, in schools where cyber schooling and computer clubs existed, science students and club members often enjoyed greater access to the computers
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 6
Research Results Contd..Equipment, access and connectivity
Contd..
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
Buganda Rd St. KizitoPrimary School
Nabisunsa Girls
Student to Computer Ratio Buganda Rd
St Peters Nsambya
Kisowera
St. Anthony PS
St. Kizito Primary School
Kibuli Secondary
Kings College Budo
St Kizito Secondary
Nabisunsa Girls
Kyambogo University
Department of Adult andCommunication Skills
Ratio of Computers to Educators
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
1
Institution
Nu
mb
er
Kisowera Primary School
Kibuli Secondary School
St Peters Primary School Nsambya
DEPARTMENT OF ADULT EDUCATION ANDCOMMUNICATION STUDIES MAKEREREUNIVERSITY
St Kizito Primary School Bugoloobi
ST.KIZITO SECONDARY SCHOOL BUGOLOBI
King's College Budo
St Anthony Day and Boarding Primary School
Buganda Road Primary School
Nabisunsa Girls School
KYAMBOGO UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OFEDUCATION
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 7
Equipment, access and connectivity contd..Connectivity:• Internet Connectivity was found in only 8 out of 11 institutions studied and
in all, connected to just a few computers
• Institutions subscribed to different Internet providers (no policy/support, institutions depend on good will)
• Bandwidth used was too low for majority of institutions and costly
• 3 out of the 5 primary schools did not have internet connectivity at all
Institution Connectivity type
27%
37%
27%
9%
None
VSAT Connection
Broadband Connection
Dialup Connection
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 8
Equipment, access and connectivity contd..
Factors limiting Access and Connectivity:• Government policy of not charging fees in primary schools makes it
difficulty for public schools to generate resources to set up the necessary infrastructure
• School Governance and Administration attitude towards computers and Internet
• Connectivity access rates are very high
• Absence of a policy that governs all educational institutions in the country on how they integrate ICT in education
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 9
Research Results Contd..Teacher training
The study revealed that:
• Majority of teacher trainers reported to be computer literate, had competencies in applications like Word, Excel, Access and PowerPoint, Internet explorer and Email
• Despite the above, Teacher trainers lacked attitude and motivation to fully integrate ICT in their training of teachers
• This could be as a result of inadequate capacity pedagogical integration of ICT, limited ICT equipment, lack of incentives from both institutions and government to encourage to use ICT, or the design of the teacher training curriculum
• At secondary level (in-service), majority of educators had participated in less than 50 hours of professional development which included ICT integration.
• It was only in one secondary school where 62% of educators were reported to having participated in more than 50 hours of professional Development including ICT Integration.
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 10
ICT Use for teaching and learning Findings indicated that:
• In 9 out of 11 institutions, educators and learners used ICT for academic
purposes with variations in frequency, type of use and course taught
using ICT
• Tertiary institutions and secondary schools used ICT more frequently
compared to the primary schools
• 3 Secondary schools had Cyber rooms connected to internet where
teachers and students undertook teaching/learning esp. science
subjects
• Male educators on average used more hours per week on the
computers for academic purposes than females
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 11
ICT Use for teaching and learning Contd..
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 12
ICT use for learning by learners Contd..
Results indicate that:
• There are variations in the ICT use for learning by students and the
variations are as a result of levels of access to computers, institutional
rules and regulations and the level of ICT skills by the learners
• At primary school level, students used the computer labs only once a
week for about thirty (30) minutes.
• In two public primary schools, students reported that they rarely used
computers
• At secondary level, students’ use of ICT for learning varied according to
school and instruction by educators, class level and whether they
belonged to the computer club or not.
• Students that had access to and used ICT regularly were those who
were taking computer studies as an examinable subject at ‘O’ level
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 13
ICT use for learning by learners Contd..Challenges to the use of ICT as stated by the learners included:
• High student Computer Ratio
• Intermittent power supply,
• Unstable and slow internet facilities,
• Regular computer breakdowns and viruses,
• Limited time for practice,
• Congested computer labs,
• Absence of ICT teachers,
• Limited skills in ICT for most learners,
• Absence of printing services,
• Very old computers with outdated operating systems
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 14
Impact of ICT on Educators and Teaching
Impact on Lesson planning • There was no reported impact as yet by most of the
educators because they heavily rely on pens and books to do that.
• Even where there was effort, issues of access, skills, power supply and the necessary time to do that was still a challenge.
• In schools where educators reported an impact on lesson planning, ICT helped them in the efficient use of time and coming up with appropriate diagrams and illustrations.
• In schools where there was the internet connectivity, educators reported that ICT had helped them in updating their teaching content
RESULTS Contd..
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 15
Impact on in-class Teaching
Most educators reported that the impact is not yet felt mainly because:• They do not have the necessary ICT equipment (e.g. LCD Projectors,
Beamer Boards, Laptops) and the computers are not in class, but in centralized computer labs
• Lack skills in ICT integration in their subjects• Most teachers have not under taken ICT training coursesHowever, in DAECS, St. Kizito secondary school and other institutions where
ICT is integrated, it was reported that;• ICT helped in enriching teaching content that had been obtained from text
books• ICT had improved confidence for the educators as they were well informed
and prepared• ICT facilitated more interaction and participation with the students as there
was no constant reading or writing on the part of the educator.
Impact of ICT on Educators and Teaching Contd..
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 16
Impact of ICT on Educators and Teaching. Contd..
Impact on evaluation methods
Educators reported a big impact in this area• Easy access by educators to students performance records and
tracking them. This helps educators to give appropriate guidance and counseling to prospective learners
• Management of student information esp. monthly and end of term assessment as well as report making
However, • Assessments that required inquiry and research of information from
the internet were limited• Many educators used manual ways to evaluate and assess students.• In some institutions exams were hand written and forwarded to the
examinations master who together with the schools secretary type them and compute results.
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 17
Impact of ICT on Educators and Teaching Contd..
Impact of Student/Educator Communication Over all there was limited impact on student /educator communication
using ICT due to:• Lack of internet connectivity in many of the institutions esp. primary• Lack of personal email addresses even by the educators• Strict ICT rules in some schools regarding internet access• High teacher student ratio at all levels
However in some schools there has been improved communication between learners and educators.
For example, in Kibuli SSS, students in upper secondary (S3-S6) are mandated to own email addresses, and teachers give 10 minutes to students of every ICT Class, to check on their emails. Also in this school students use NetTalk to share notes, questions and answers electronically.
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 18
Research Results Contd..
The Learners' stated impact of ICT on their Learning included;
• Increased access to quality educational materials especially through surfing on the Internet resulting into accessing to update educational information, thus making learners’ more enthusiastic to put in more effort and perform better
• Abstract concepts in science were simplified for students when taught using Cyber rooms - thus increasing student motivation, willingness to learn and generally changing the traditional belief of saying “science subjects are difficult”
• Making learning more interesting and exciting as well as improving the level of participation on the part of learners compared to other subjects where there was no integration of ICT at all.
• Facilitated individual, inquiry and engaged learning approaches as students can get notes; compare notes and other educational resources from the Internet.
Impact of ICT on Learners and Learning
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 19
Impact of ICT on Learners and Learning. Contd..
• Increased independent learning, making learners more responsible and focused
• Builds a good relationship between educators and learners there by increasing academic excellence.
However, some of the negative impacts were mentioned to include:• The fact that once students get addicted to digital learning they don’t
easily learn from other methods; • Use of internet for non academic purposes like chatting and watching
pornography. • Some educators complained that students had become lazy as they
hoped to get all the formulas and information they wanted from the Internet.
• Therefore, it was reported that ICT has on some occasion discouraged hard work and the spirit of innovativeness and makes students less functional in a situation where computers are not available.
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 20
Institution Management and ICT • Majority of institutions (8 out of 11) did not have well written out ICT
integration plans: what the researchers found at institutional level were the expressed views and ideas of the educator in charge of ICT
• Overall the institutions did not have written down strategic plans on how to sustain the ICT they had acquired
• However, a computer fee was being levied every term from every student and had helped very much the institutions in acquiring and maintaining of computers and internet connectivity where they existed.
Barriers to ICT sustainability in institutions• Inadequate funding especially to access software as most schools use
licensed as opposed to open source software• Negative attitude of education managers and teachers towards use of ICT• Government policy of removing the payment of institutional fees and other
costs by parents in public primary schools• Current teacher training has not mainstreamed ICT in the curriculum• CPD Programmes for educators do not include ICT integration
Research Results Contd..
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 21
Lessons learnt & Implications for policy and practice
• Educational Institutions are doing their best to acquire computers for teaching, learning and administration purposes;
• Students are enthusiastic in using computers for learning despite the high student computer ratio
• Public education institutions have a higher student to computer ratio than private ones
• Educator to computer ratio still high
• With regard to connectivity, access rates are still high and most institutions can not cope with connectivity
• There is need for policy guidelines to cover education institutions with regard to ICT equipment and connectivity
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 22
Lessons learnt & Implications for policy and practice Contd..• ICT Integration is still inadequate, More individualized than
institutionalized
• Schools that have embraced public-private partnerships like cyber schools technology solutions have gone along way to integrate technology in science subjects
• Existence of computer clubs has enabled peer learning sharing and documentation of information
• Effective utilization of ICT for teaching and learning purposes requires:– Competencies and skills/interest of educators in ICT integration
and availability of supportive institutional ICT policies– Easy access to adequate and functioning computers and reliable
Internet connectivity– Continuous in-service training for teachers on Programmes that
embrace ICT integration– Capacity building for the development of ICT enhanced content by
both the private and public sector
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 23
Lessons learnt & Implications for policy and practice Contd..
– Development and availing of ICT enhanced content that cuts across
the curriculum
• There is need for Government to expedite the finalization of the draft
National ICT Policy that will address challenges of equipment and
infrastructure, training of educators in pedagogical integration of ICT and
developing ICT enhanced curricula materials
• Government should take a leading role in equipping the institutions it
supports with adequate ICT to realize its long term vision of providing
quality education
• Need for institutions to develop institutional level ICT policies and guide
lines including sustainability plans.
• Need to mainstream Pedagogical integration of ICT in the Teacher
training curriculum
PanAf project/Observatory/panaf-edu/Makerere University 24
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Thank You
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