TY - JOUR
T1 - Teachers learning to use the iPad in Scotland and Wales
T2 - a new model of professional development
AU - Beauchamp, Gary
AU - Burden, Kevin
AU - Abbinett, Emily
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Taylor & Francis.
PY - 2015/2/25
Y1 - 2015/2/25
N2 - In learning to use a new technology like the iPad, primary teachers adopt a diverse range of experiential, informal and playful strategies contrasting sharply with traditional models underpinning professional development which emphasise formal courses and events led by ‘experts’ conducted in formal settings such as the school. Since post-PC devices like the iPad have been linked with transformational educational learning, there is an imperative to better understand how teachers can be encouraged to use them more effectively. Despite their growing popularity in schools, there is little research to indicate how and under what circumstances teachers learn to integrate these technologies into their daily practices. This paper uses data collected from two national studies of iPad use in Scotland and Wales to propose a new model of professional development. This model reflects findings that the teachers reject traditional models of sequential, or staged, professional development (often led by external providers or ‘experts’), in favour of a more nuanced and fluid model where they learn at their own pace, in a largely experiential fashion, alongside their pupils in a relationship which reverses the traditional power nexus. The model has the potential to inform professional development for both trainee and serving teachers in learning to use the iPad in the primary classroom.
AB - In learning to use a new technology like the iPad, primary teachers adopt a diverse range of experiential, informal and playful strategies contrasting sharply with traditional models underpinning professional development which emphasise formal courses and events led by ‘experts’ conducted in formal settings such as the school. Since post-PC devices like the iPad have been linked with transformational educational learning, there is an imperative to better understand how teachers can be encouraged to use them more effectively. Despite their growing popularity in schools, there is little research to indicate how and under what circumstances teachers learn to integrate these technologies into their daily practices. This paper uses data collected from two national studies of iPad use in Scotland and Wales to propose a new model of professional development. This model reflects findings that the teachers reject traditional models of sequential, or staged, professional development (often led by external providers or ‘experts’), in favour of a more nuanced and fluid model where they learn at their own pace, in a largely experiential fashion, alongside their pupils in a relationship which reverses the traditional power nexus. The model has the potential to inform professional development for both trainee and serving teachers in learning to use the iPad in the primary classroom.
KW - iPads
KW - mobile learning
KW - professional development model
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84929023386&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/02607476.2015.1013370
DO - 10.1080/02607476.2015.1013370
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84929023386
SN - 0260-7476
VL - 41
SP - 161
EP - 179
JO - Journal of Education for Teaching
JF - Journal of Education for Teaching
IS - 2
ER -