How Teachers in India Reconfigure their Work Practices around a Teacher-Oriented Technology Intervention

The proliferation of mobile devices around the world, combined with falling costs of hardware and Internet connectivity, have resulted in an increasing number of organizations that work to introduce educational technology interventions into low-income schools in the Global South. However, to date, most prior HCI research examining such interventions has focused on interventions that target students. In this paper, we expand prior literature by examining an intervention, called Meghshala, that targets teachers in low-income schools as its primary users. Through interviews and observations with 39 participants from 12 government schools in India, we show how the introduction of a teacher-focused technology intervention causes teachers to reconfigure their work practices, including lesson preparation, in-classroom teaching practices, bureaucratic work processes, and post-teaching feedback mechanisms. We use the concept of material agency to analyze our findings with respect to teacher agency and reconfiguration, and use theories of teacher knowledge to highlight the kinds of knowledge production that teachers in our research context tend to focus on (e.g., content knowledge). Finally, we offer design opportunities for future teacher-focused technology interventions.

[1]  Thomas N. Smyth,et al.  Is the One Laptop Per Child Enough? Viewpoints from Classroom Teachers in Rwanda , 2013 .

[2]  K. Akyeampong Teacher Educators’ Practice and Vision of Good Teaching in Teacher Education Reform Context in Ghana , 2017 .

[3]  D. Clandinin,et al.  The SAGE Handbook of Research on Teacher Education , 2017 .

[4]  Paul M. Leonardi,et al.  Digital materiality? How artifacts without matter, matter , 2010, First Monday.

[5]  Edward Cutrell,et al.  An exploratory study on the use of camera phones and pico projectors in rural India , 2011, Mobile HCI.

[6]  Lawrence P. Gallagher,et al.  What Makes Professional Development Effective? Strategies That Foster Curriculum Implementation , 2007 .

[7]  Ann L. Brown,et al.  Guided discovery in a community of learners. , 1994 .

[8]  Rachel E. Scherr,et al.  Transformative professional development: cultivating concern with others' thinking as the root of teacher identity , 2010, ICLS.

[9]  Maria Inês Marcondes Teacher Education in Brazil , 1999 .

[10]  Alison Buckler Reconsidering the evidence base, considering the rural: Aiming for a better understanding of the education and training needs of Sub-Saharan African teachers , 2011 .

[11]  Vanessa Frías-Martínez,et al.  Mobilizing education: evaluation of a mobile learning tool in a low-income school , 2012, Mobile HCI.

[12]  John Oversby,et al.  Teacher agency: an ecological approach , 2016 .

[13]  M. Mcneil Simians, Cyborgs and Women: The Reinvention of Nature , 1992 .

[14]  J. Pietarinen,et al.  Teachers’ professional agency and learning – from adaption to active modification in the teacher community , 2015 .

[15]  Betty Collis,et al.  Flexible learning in a digital world: Experiences and expectations , 2001 .

[16]  Selcuk Besir Demir,et al.  The Use of Tablets Distributed Within the Scope of FATIH Project for Education in Turkey (Is FATIH Project a Fiasco or a Technological Revolution , 2015 .

[17]  Kurtis Heimerl,et al.  Metamouse: improving multi-user sharing of existing educational applications , 2010, ICTD 2010.

[18]  Angèle Christin Algorithms in practice: Comparing web journalism and criminal justice , 2017 .

[19]  M. Fullan,et al.  Understanding Teacher Development. , 1992 .

[20]  Maxwell M. Yurkofsky,et al.  Expanding Outcomes: Exploring Varied Forms of Teacher Learning in an Online Professional Development Experience , 2016, ICLS.

[21]  Paul Marshall,et al.  Más Tecnologia, Más Cambio?: Investigating an Educational Technology Project in Rural Peru , 2015, CHI.

[22]  Kevin Roberts,et al.  Jugaad Innovation: Think Frugal, Be Flexible, Generate Breakthrough Growth , 2014 .

[23]  Deborah Loewenberg Ball,et al.  Content Knowledge for Teaching , 2008 .

[24]  Lucy Suchman,et al.  Human-Machine Reconfigurations: Plans and Situated Actions , 2006 .

[25]  N. Purohit,et al.  Knowledge for teacher development in India: the importance of ‘local knowledge’ for in-service education , 2004 .

[26]  Edward Cutrell,et al.  Cloze: an authoring tool for teachers with low computer proficiency , 2010, ICTD.

[27]  M. Mahruf C. Shohel,et al.  School-based teachers’ professional development through technology-enhanced learning in Bangladesh , 2012 .

[28]  Lesley A. Rex,et al.  School Cultures as Contexts for Informal Teacher Learning. , 2010 .

[29]  Z. Fang A review of research on teacher beliefs and practices , 1996 .

[30]  V. K. Raina Indigenizing teacher education in developing countries: The Indian context , 1999 .

[31]  Developing communities of practice in practice: overcoming suspicion and establishing dialogue amongst primary school teachers in Antigua and Barbuda , 2013 .

[32]  Laura Forlano,et al.  WiFi Geographies: When Code Meets Place , 2009, Inf. Soc..

[33]  R. Edwards,et al.  Teacher Agency in Curriculum Making: Agents of Change and Spaces for Manoeuvre , 2012 .

[34]  Matthew J. Koehler,et al.  Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPACK) , 2009 .

[35]  W. J. Woollard,et al.  TTRB Review. DEEP IMPACT: an investigation of the use of information and communication technologies for teacher education in the global south , 2008 .

[36]  V. Ramachandran Why School Teachers Are Demotivated and Disheartened , 2005 .

[37]  Elizabeth Campbell,et al.  Teacher Agency in Curriculum Contexts , 2012 .

[38]  V. Braun,et al.  Using thematic analysis in psychology , 2006 .

[39]  J. Tan Teacher Education in the Asia-Pacific Region: A Comparative Study , 2000 .

[40]  Amy B. Dellinger,et al.  Measuring Teachers' Self-Efficacy Beliefs: Development and Use of the TEBS-Self. , 2008 .

[41]  L. Shulman Those Who Understand: Knowledge Growth in Teaching , 1986 .

[42]  D. Caselli Espeland, W. e Sauder, M. (2016), Engines of Anxiety. Academic Rankings, Reputation and Accountability , 2018 .

[43]  S. María,et al.  Resisting the marginalization of science in an urban school: Coactivating social, cultural, material, and strategic resources , 2010 .

[44]  Valery Chirkov The Universality of Psychological Autonomy Across Cultures: Arguments from Developmental and Social Psychology , 2014 .

[45]  Chun Lai,et al.  Teacher agency and professional learning in cross-cultural teaching contexts: Accounts of Chinese teachers from international schools in Hong Kong , 2016 .

[46]  Teacher Learning in a Professional Learning Community: Potential for Dual-layer Knowledge Building , 2016, ICLS.

[47]  M. Fullan,et al.  Essential features of effective networks in education , 2016 .

[48]  Marlene Scardamalia,et al.  Computer Support for Knowledge-Building Communities , 1994 .

[49]  Karen Evans,et al.  Concepts of bounded agency in education, work, and the personal lives of young adults , 2007 .

[50]  M. Heidegger,et al.  Being and time : a translation of Sein und Zeit , 1996 .

[51]  S. Wineburg,et al.  Toward a Theory of Teacher Community. , 2001 .

[52]  Peggy A. Ertmer,et al.  Teacher Technology Change , 2010 .

[53]  Stephen T. Kerr,et al.  Knowledge management support for teachers , 2003 .

[54]  Yueting Xu,et al.  The trajectory of learning in a teacher community of practice: a narrative inquiry of a language teacher’s identity in the workplace , 2013 .

[55]  Robert J. Yinger,et al.  Research on Teacher Thinking , 1977 .

[56]  Ritu Dangwal,et al.  Acquisition of Computing Literacy on Shared Public Computers: Children and the "Hole in the Wall" , 2005 .

[57]  Laura M. Desimone,et al.  Improving Impact Studies of Teachers’ Professional Development: Toward Better Conceptualizations and Measures , 2009 .

[58]  Matthew J. Koehler,et al.  What is Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPACK)? , 2013 .

[59]  J. Reeve,et al.  Agency as a fourth aspect of students engagement during learning activities , 2011 .

[60]  T. Guskey Professional Development and Teacher Change , 2002 .

[61]  D. Clandinin,et al.  Teachers' Professional Knowledge Landscapes: Teacher Stories––Stories of Teachers––School Stories––Stories of Schools1 , 1996 .

[62]  Kenneth L. Kraemer,et al.  One Laptop per Child: Vision vs. Reality , 2022 .

[63]  L. Syrjälä,et al.  Silenced Truths: Relational and Emotional Dimensions of a Beginning Teacher's Identity as Part of the Micropolitical Context of School , 2015 .

[64]  Ellen T. Kamp,et al.  Phases of inquiry-based learning: Definitions and the inquiry cycle , 2015 .

[65]  Wanda J. Orlikowski,et al.  Using Technology and Constituting Structures: A Practice Lens for Studying Technology in Organizations , 2000, Theory in CSCW.

[66]  Ralph T. Putnam,et al.  What Do New Views of Knowledge and Thinking Have to Say About Research on Teacher Learning? , 2000 .

[67]  R. McAleese Flexible learning in a digital world – experiences and expectations , 2003 .

[68]  Kentaro Toyama,et al.  Collage: a presentation tool for school teachers , 2010, ICTD 2010.

[69]  Richard Dufour Learning by Doing: A Handbook for Professional Learning Communities at Work , 2006 .

[70]  Morgan G. Ames Translating Magic: The Charisma of One Laptop per Child’s XO Laptop in Paraguay , 2014 .

[71]  Stephanie B. Corliss,et al.  Professional Development for Technology-Enhanced Inquiry Science , 2011 .

[72]  Ana Santiago,et al.  Technology and Child Development: Evidence from the One Laptop Per Child Program , 2012, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[73]  Richard Anderson,et al.  Facilitated video instruction in low resource schools , 2012, ICTD '12.

[74]  Anna Craft,et al.  Teacher development: exploring our own practice , 2000 .

[75]  Laura M. Desimone,et al.  Effects of Professional Development on Teachers’ Instruction: Results from a Three-year Longitudinal Study , 2002 .

[76]  Glen Bull,et al.  TPACK: A Framework for the CITE Journal , 2009 .

[77]  Elizabeth Koh,et al.  Developing Professional Competency in a CSCL Environment for Teamwork: Two TPACK Case Studies of Teachers as Co-Designers , 2017, CSCL.

[78]  Paul Newton,et al.  A situated account of teacher agency and learning: Critical reflections on Professional Learning Communities , 2012 .

[79]  R. Buchanan Teacher identity and agency in an era of accountability , 2015 .

[80]  Andrew Pickering,et al.  The mangle of practice : time, agency, and science , 1997 .

[81]  T. Lewis,et al.  Getting a Grip on the Classroom: From Psychological to Phenomenological Curriculum Development in Teacher Education Programs , 2014 .

[82]  S. Anwaruddin ICT and Language Teacher Development in the Global South: A New Materialist Discourse Analysis , 2016 .

[83]  Laura Forlano Towards An Integrated Theory Of The Cyber-Urban , 2015 .

[84]  Tom Power,et al.  Introducing mobile technology for enhancing teaching and learning in Bangladesh: teacher perspectives , 2010 .

[85]  Chin-Chung Tsai,et al.  Modeling primary school pre-service teachers' Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPACK) for meaningful learning with information and communication technology (ICT) , 2011, Comput. Educ..

[86]  J. Eneau Educational Reciprocity and Developing Autonomy: The Social Dimension of Becoming Oneself , 2012 .

[87]  Morgan G. Ames Learning consumption: Media, literacy, and the legacy of One Laptop per Child , 2016, Inf. Soc..

[88]  L. Hosman,et al.  Technology, teachers, and training: combining theory with Macedonia's experience , 2010, ICTD.

[90]  Mark Priestley,et al.  Teacher Agency : What Is It and Why Does It Matter? , 2015 .

[91]  Mark S. Schlager,et al.  Teacher Professional Development, Technology, and Communities of Practice: Are We Putting the Cart Before the Horse? , 2003 .

[92]  Lasse Lipponen,et al.  Acting as Accountable Authors: Creating Interactional Spaces for Agency Work in Teacher Education. , 2011 .