ICT FOR EDUCATION IN LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN Risks and Opportunities Daniela Trucco Horwitz...
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Transcript of ICT FOR EDUCATION IN LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN Risks and Opportunities Daniela Trucco Horwitz...
ICT FOR EDUCATION IN LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
Risks and Opportunities
Daniela Trucco HorwitzSocial Development Division, ECLAC
Regional Preparatory MeetingECOSOC Annual Ministerial Review for 2011May 12 - 13, 2011, Buenos Aires, Argentina
G
04/18/23 -2-
Presentation Content
1.ICT policies and education in the region
2. State of progress in the region
3. Towards an integral perspective
4. Contributing to quality of education
5. Fostering social inclusion
6. Contributing to educational system efficiency
7. Final Reflections
Source: Prepared on the basis of ECLAC data, Survey on ICT education policy and practice.Scale: 1 = No, but policy and programs are being designed; 2 = No, it has only some ICT initiatives; 3 = No, but a number of national ICT
initiatives are underway; 4 = Yes, but the definition document is in the development phase; 5 = Yes, it has been published.
1. ICT Policy and Education in the Region
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47%
53%
53%
59%
71%
76%
76%
81%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
Mejorar la cobertura educacional (matrícula, retención, rezago, etc.)
Mejorar el aprendizaje de los alumnos
Mejorar la gestión en el Ministerio
Desarrollo de aspectos cognitivos (motivación, autoestima, etc.)
Desarrollo profesional de docentes
Desarrollo de competencias TIC de alumnos
Mejorar la gestión escolar
Innovación y/o cambio en las prácticas de enseñanza aprendizaje
LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN (17 COUNTRIES): PERCENTAGE OF COUNTRIES THAT EXPLICITLY INCORPORATE THE FOLLOWING GOALS IN THEIR ICT IN EDUCATION POLICY
Source: Prepared on the basis of ECLAC data, Survey on TIC in education policy and practice.
1. ICT and Education Policies in the Region
2. State of Progress in the region: very unequal access in the home
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LATIN AMERICA AND CARIBBEAN (9 COUNTRIES) AND OECD: PERCENTAGE OF 15 YEAR OLD STUDENTS WHOSE HOMES POSSESS AT LEAST ONE COMPUTER, BY SOCIOECONOMIC AND CULTURAL QUARTILE
2009
Source: ECLAC, drawn from special processing of microdata culled from PISA 2009 testing.
2. State of Progress in the Region Access in the most-equitable schools
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LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN (9 COUNTRIES) AND OECD: PERCENTAGE OF 15 YEAR OLD STUDENTS WHOSE SCHOOL CENTERS POSSESS AT LEAST ONE COMPUTER FOR ACADEMIC USE
SEGÚN CUARTIL SOCIOECONOMICO Y CULTURAL, 2009
Source: ECLAC, on the basis of special processing of microdata from PISA 2009 testing.
2. State of Progress in the Region – Uses
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The school center plays an important role in access – closing the gaps
BUT – THE USE made of those computers matters
The type of exposure to technology
Less availability for use in the school center
Oriented as a tool for integral uses and benefits
2. State of Progress in the Region
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The incorporation of ICT in the schools must be addressed from an integral perspective.
The key aspects that must be addressed are:
• Access (computers, connectivity)
• Use (frecuency, place, models)
• Competencies (teachers, students, school directors)
• Content (portals, educational software, applications)
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3. Towards an integral perspective
For ICT to contribute to improvement of education quality, certain challenges must be addressed.
These include:
• Training of teaching staff in pedagogical use of ICT
• Definition of ICT curriculum integration model
• Availability of digital educational content
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4. Contributing to quality of education
ICT in education programs must foster social inclusion by reducing the current social gaps and preventing the generation of new differences.
This means:
• Reducing overlapping gaps (access, usages and skills)
• Harness ICT to achieve better educational results for all
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5. Fostering social inclusion
ICT must also be used to improve school management.
The expectation is that the potential of ICT be harnessed on three different levels:
• Educational System (greater transparency, monitoring)
• School (training management staff)
• Curriculum management in the classroom
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6. Contributing to education system efficiency
1. Integral and long-term policy – ICT are not a shortcut2. Consideration of a model that is adequate for the
needs and possibilities of each country– ECLAC Good Practices Study
3. Skill training is essential: training for initial teachers4. Development of indicators and records for monitoring
progress
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Final Reflections
Thank you for your attention
Social Development DivisionEconomic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean
(ECLAC)http://www.cepal.org/dds/