Guidelines for the professional development of Mathematics teachers in the pedagogical use of ICT in open distance learning / Verona Leendertz

Professional development (PD) of teachers is part of the Department of Basic Education‘s (DBE)
initiative to encourage school communities to use of information and communication technology (ICT)
to improve the quality of Mathematics teaching and learning. The South African Council of Educators
stipulates that PD programmes should align with system-wide needs, strengthen learning area content
and outcomes, and promote system transformation. Imbedded in this system-wide criterion is The
White Paper on e-Education to employ a fully ICT integrated system at all levels of education:
management, teaching and learning, and administration by 2013. Mathematics teachers require PD
that develops their technological pedagogical and content knowledge (TPACK) and their social
professional identity (SPI). The PD of Mathematics teachers for ICT integration can assist the DBE to
achieve the aims of The White Paper on e-Education and bridge the technology gap between South
Africa and international education systems. Open distance learning (ODL) could be a viable method
to deliver PD to Mathematics teachers to address their zone of proximal development, develop their
TPACK, and establish and maintain their SPI. This study made use of a fully mixed sequential equal
status multi-mode research design and methodologies to develop guidelines for the PD of
Mathematics teachers in the pedagogical use of ICT in ODL. The qualitative phase (Phase I) was
rooted in the interpretivist paradigm. Through an adjustable exploration of a systematic literature
review, the researcher identified 23 core documents, analysed them with Atlas.ti™, and
conceptualised four themes according to Engeström‘s third generation activity theory (AT). Phase II
(radical exploration phase) of the research design was rooted in the radical structuralist paradigm. In
the context of transformation, it developed, validated, and standardised a research instrument for the
measurement of Mathematics teachers‘ PD requirements. The instrument was distributed to 300
senior phase (grades 7-9) Mathematics teachers in eight education management district centres of the
WCED. The analyses of the quantitative data conceptualised a fifth activity system. The five activity
systems from the adjustable and radical exploration phases were symbiotic, and co-dependent.
Expansive learning was used for boundary crossing and network building during six phases of this
study. The findings from the six phases of the expansive learning cycle indicated that PD of
Mathematics teachers in ODL for Phase III implementation of the e-Education policy should be a joint
initiative. Fundamentally ICT integration and implementation should start with Department of Basic
Education (DBE) initiatives. The DBE and Provincial Departments of Education (PDEs) should
conduct a needs analysis of ICT implementation, evaluate previous ICT PD programmes, plan ICT PD
strategies aligned with the ICT development plan, as well as with the requirements of the Mathematics
teachers. The DBE and PDE should invest in the provision of ICT equipment, afford human capital,
reinstate the laptop initiative for teachers, and supply schools with networked-computer facilities to
explore online platforms for PD. Mathematics teachers should assess their professional knowledge to
construct new philosophies, create a subject network group, and interact as participants and members
within their social environments. The standardised instrument could be used to determine and
compare the PD of Mathematics teachers in other provinces and contexts. / PhD (Training and development), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:NWUBOLOKA1/oai:dspace.nwu.ac.za:10394/11569
Date January 2013
CreatorsLeendertz, Verona
Source SetsNorth-West University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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