Basic school teachers’ perspective to digital teaching and learning in Ghana

This study proposes a model for describing the situation of Digital Teaching and Learning (TD-TaL) in Ghanaian schools using the perspectives of basic school teachers. The Digital Teaching and Learning model was developed based on the theories of Valsiner’s Zone of Free Movement (ZFM) and Zone of Promoted Action (ZPA) and Vygotsky’s Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD). The model proposes to look at the effects of ZFM in schools (comprising Digital environment factors and Personal attitudinal and Digital Culture factors) and ZPA (comprising Teacher Training factor) on the Teachers’ Digital Knowledge, Competence and Action (TDKCA) factors to influence teachers in their Zone of Proximal Development. The model was tested in Ghana’s case using the survey data collected from 256 teachers from 45 schools across six districts in the Western Region of Ghana. The findings from Regression path analysis revealed that Personal and Digital Culture factors, but most of all teachers’ Digital Attitudes effected directly on Teachers’ Digital Activities they claimed to be doing, whereas from Environmental factors only Schools’ Digital Agenda was impacting Teachers’ Digital Action both directly and indirectly through Teachers’ Digital Training (ZPA). The model specifically highlighted that in observed Ghanaian schools the ZFM factors Digital Infrastructure and Digital Support to Digital Teaching did not associate with the ZPA factor Digital Teacher Training and overall to Teachers’ Digital Knowledge, Competence and Action factors.

[1]  J. Fu ICT in Education: A Critical Literature Review and Its Implications , 2013, International Journal of Finance, Insurance and Risk Management.

[2]  C. Clement,et al.  Trends and Issues to integrate ICT in Teaching Learning for the Future World of Education , 2011 .

[3]  Nancy Law,et al.  SITES2006–International comparative survey of pedagogical practices and ICT in education , 2007, Education and Information Technologies.

[4]  Paul Webb,et al.  Teachers' Perceptions about their Own and their Schools' Readiness for Computer Implementation: A South African Case Study , 2012 .

[5]  Berhane Aradom Tedla Understanding the importance, impacts and barriers of ICT on Teaching and Learning in East African Countries , 2012 .

[6]  Chao-hsiu Chen Why Do Teachers Not Practice What They Believe Regarding Technology Integration? , 2008 .

[7]  Joke Voogt,et al.  ICT use in the teaching of mathematics: Implications for professional development of pre-service teachers in Ghana , 2011, Education and Information Technologies.

[8]  James Sunney Quaicoe,et al.  Modelling Factors Influencing Digital Readiness: A Case of Teachers in Ghana's Basic School System , 2015, ICWL.

[9]  Merrilyn Goos A sociocultural framework for understanding technology integration in secondary school mathematics , 2009 .

[10]  Alexander Gyamfi,et al.  Closing the Digital Divide in Sub-Saharan Africa: meeting the challenges of the information age , 2005 .

[11]  Ali Ndiwalana,et al.  Uganda ICT sector performance review, 2009/2010 , 2010 .

[12]  Richard Bukaliya,et al.  Teacher Competence in ICT: Implications for Computer Education in Zimbabwean Secondary Schools , 2011 .

[13]  Fethi A. Inan,et al.  Factors affecting technology integration in K-12 classrooms: a path model , 2010 .

[14]  Seidu Al-hassan,et al.  Promoting teaching and learning in Ghanaian Basic Schools through ICT , 2015 .

[15]  Kofi B. Boakye,et al.  11. Teacher ICT Readiness in Ghana , 2008 .

[16]  James Sunney Quaicoe,et al.  DIGITAL LEARNING ECOSYSTEM SERVICES AND EDUCATIONAL CHANGE IN GHANA’S BASIC SCHOOLS , 2016 .

[17]  Susan McKenney,et al.  Designing and researching technology-enhanced learning for the zone of proximal implementation , 2013 .

[18]  Raduan Che Rose,et al.  Teachers' readiness to use technology in the classroom: an empirical study , 2008 .

[20]  R. Ifeoma,et al.  THE TEACHERS AND THE USE OF ICT FOR PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT , 2013 .

[21]  N. Ololube Appraising the relationship between ICT usage and integration and the standard of teacher education programs in a developing economy , 2006 .

[22]  Greta Björk Gudmundsdottir From digital divide to digital equity: learners , 2010 .

[23]  Kwame Ansong-Gyimah,et al.  The Perceptions of Students, Teachers, and Educational Officers in Ghana on the Role of Computer and the Teacher in Promoting the First Five Principles of Instruction , 2010 .

[24]  Greta Björk Gudmundsdottir,et al.  From digital divide to digital equity: Learners' ICT competence in four primary schools in Cape Town, South Africa , 2010 .

[25]  Joke Voogt,et al.  Factors affecting teachers’ continuation of technology use in teaching , 2015, Education and Information Technologies.

[26]  A. Aremu,et al.  Teacher Readiness to Integrate Information Technology into Teaching and Learning Processes in Nigerian Secondary Schools: A Case Study , 2011 .

[27]  K. Islam,et al.  Integrated Resources and Training Facilitation: A Strategic Priority when Promoting ICT in Developing Countries , 2013 .

[28]  N. Addy Contextualising the Underperformance of Rural Education in northern Ghana: Management Approach , 2013 .

[29]  Frank W. K. Amenyedzi,et al.  The Use of Computers and Internet as Supplementary Source of Educational Material: A Case Study of the Senior High Schools in the Tema Metropolis in Ghana , 2011 .

[30]  Dauda Dansarki Isiyaku,et al.  Empirical modeling of information communication technology usage behaviour among business education teachers in tertiary colleges of a developing country , 2015 .

[31]  Glen Farrell and Shafika Isaacs and Michael Trucano Survey of ICT and Education in Africa. Volume 2: 53 Country Reports , 2007 .

[32]  D. Brooks,et al.  Interfacial thickness of liposomes containing poly(ethylene glycol)-cholesterol from electrophoresis. , 1996, Biophysical journal.

[33]  Agnes Chigona,et al.  Educators’ motivation on integration of ICTs into pedagogy: case of disadvantaged areas , 2014 .

[34]  James Sunney Quaicoe,et al.  Factors determining digital divide in Ghana's basic schools , 2015, 2015 IST-Africa Conference.

[35]  M. Goos,et al.  Exploring numeracy teacher identity: an adaptation of Valsiner's zone theory , 2013 .

[36]  Jaan Valsiner,et al.  Culture and the Development of Children's Action: A Theory of Human Development , 1997 .

[37]  S. Hennessy,et al.  Teacher Factors Influencing Classroom Use of ICT in Sub-Saharan Africa , 2010 .

[38]  Joke Voogt,et al.  Pedagogical practices and ICT use around the world: Findings from the IEA international comparative study SITES2006 , 2009, Education and Information Technologies.

[39]  L. Vygotsky Interaction between learning and development , 1978 .

[40]  Yong Zhao,et al.  Bridging the Gap: Technology Trends and Use of Technology in Schools , 2013, J. Educ. Technol. Soc..

[41]  Nomsa M. Mndzebele Teachers Readiness in Using ICT in the Classroom: The Case of a Developing Country , 2013 .

[42]  Samuel Owusu-Ansah,et al.  One Laptop Per Child Policy in Ghana: Any Impact on Teaching and Learning? , 2015 .

[43]  Joke Voogt,et al.  Exploring the potential of the will, skill, tool model in Ghana: Predicting prospective and practicing teachers' use of technology , 2011, Comput. Educ..

[44]  Bernard Yaw Sekyi Acquah,et al.  Status of implementation of the ICT Curriculum in Ghanaian Basic Schools , 2012 .

[45]  G. Frempong Developing Information Society in Ghana: How Far? , 2011, Electron. J. Inf. Syst. Dev. Ctries..

[46]  Martin Valcke,et al.  Understanding structural and cultural school characteristics in relation to educational change: the case of ICT integration , 2009 .