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Examining the effectiveness of technology use in classrooms: A tertiary meta-analysis
Affiliation:1. Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada;2. McGill University, Canada;1. Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy, Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, No. 11-A Datun Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing 100101, PR China;2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, PR China;3. Stanford University, USA;4. University of Leuven, Belgium;1. Department of Educational Studies, Research Foundation Flanders, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium;2. Department of Teacher Education and School Research, Faculty of Educational Sciencies, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway;3. Centre for Educational Measurement at University of Oslo (CEMO), Faculty of Educational Sciences, Oslo, Norway;4. Department of Educational Studies, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium
Abstract:Identifying effective literacy instruction programs has been a focal point for governments, educators and parents over the last few decades (Ontario Ministry of Education, 2004, 2006; Council of Ontario Directors of Education, 2011). Given the increasing use of computer technologies in the classroom and in the home, a variety of information communication technology (ICT) interventions for learning have been introduced. Meta-analyses comparing the impact of these programs on learning, however, have yielded inconsistent findings (Andrews et al., 2007, Torgerson and Zhu, 2003, Slavin et al., 2008, Slavin et al., 2009). The present tertiary meta-analytic review re-assesses outcomes presented in three previous meta-analyses. Four moderator variables assessed the impact of the systematic review from which they were retrieved, training and support, implementation fidelity and who delivered the intervention (teacher versus researcher). Significant results were found when training and support was entered as a moderator variable with the small overall effectiveness of the ICTs (ES = 0.18), similar to those found in previous research, increasing significantly (ES = 0.57). These findings indicate the importance of including implementation factors such as training and support, when considering the relative effectiveness of ICT interventions.
Keywords:Elementary education  Evaluation of CAL systems  Improving classroom teaching  Media in education  Pedagogical issues
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