Primary pupils' use of information and communication technologies at school and home

Based on survey data from 612 pupils in five English primary schools, this paper investigates children's engagement with information and communication technologies (ICTs) inside and outside the school context. Analysis of the data shows pupils' engagements with ICTs to be often perfunctory and unspectacular, especially within the school setting, where the influence of year group and school attended are prominent. Whilst the majority of children felt that ICT use led to gains in learning, the paper discusses how there was a strong sense of educational uses of ICTs being constrained by the nature of the schools within which ‘educational’ use was largely framed and often situated. The paper concludes by suggesting possible changes to ICT provision in primary schools, most notably relaxing school restrictions regarding Internet access and developing meaningful dialogues with pupils about future forms of educational ICT use.

[1]  C. Crook,et al.  Children's Computer Use at Home and at School: Context and continuity , 2002 .

[2]  Neil Selwyn,et al.  The use of computer technology in university teaching and learning: a critical perspective , 2007, J. Comput. Assist. Learn..

[3]  Johan van Braak,et al.  Towards a typology of computer use in primary education , 2007, J. Comput. Assist. Learn..

[4]  Ian Hall,et al.  Primary school students' perceptions of interactive whiteboards , 2005, J. Comput. Assist. Learn..

[5]  B. Green,et al.  Aliens in the Classroom , 1993 .

[6]  Neil Selwyn,et al.  Primary school children's use of ICT , 2000, Br. J. Educ. Technol..

[7]  Maggie McPherson,et al.  A New Generation Gap? Some Thoughts on the Consequences of Early ICT First Contact , 2005, Int. J. Inf. Commun. Technol. Educ..

[8]  Johan van Braak,et al.  Curricula and the use of ICT in education: Two worlds apart? , 2007, Br. J. Educ. Technol..

[9]  Mark J. Garrison,et al.  Social Contexts, Defensive Pedagogies, and the (Mis)uses of Educational Technology , 2004 .

[10]  T. A. Goodison,et al.  Learning with ICT at primary level: pupils' perceptions , 2002, J. Comput. Assist. Learn..

[11]  Steve Higgins,et al.  'The visual helps me understand the complicated things': pupil views of teaching and learning with interactive whiteboards , 2005, Br. J. Educ. Technol..

[12]  Neil Selwyn,et al.  Turned On/Switched Off: Exploring Children's Engagement with Computers in Primary School , 2001 .

[13]  Gabriel Reedy PowerPoint, interactive whiteboards, and the visual culture of technology in schools , 2008 .

[14]  S. Machin,et al.  New Technology in Schools: Is There a Payoff? , 2006, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[15]  Maggie McPherson,et al.  A New Generation Gap? Some thoughts on the consequences of increasingly early ICT first contact , 2005 .

[16]  S. Wheeler,et al.  Our flexible friend: The implications of individual differences for information technology teaching , 2007, Comput. Educ..