Abstract
The “failure” of educational computing is often attributed to deficiencies of practice: resisting teachers and lack of will, competence and sincerity on behalf of the teaching profession. But the complexity of school life and teachers’ work has been underestimated by the entrepreneurs of educational computing. Theoretically there is a need to approach this area from a different angle. We will suggest there is a need to reframe the issue of ICT in schools with educational policy and discourse with education, rather than with technology in mind. In order to reach that goal there is a need to inculcate “technology” as an ordinary part of teachers’ vocabulary about their own work and as a part of their professional ethos. Teachers need to examine the moral values inherent in their practices and use those values as bases for debate. Not taking up these issues and instead adopting defensive stances is dangerous to the profession. The danger is that defensiveness can be seen by others outside the school as rigidity and play into the hands of those who are impatient with teachers. It would serve teachers well if they had a more robust ability to communicate the nature of the difficulties they face and how they deal with them.
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Nordkvelle, Y.T., Olson, J. Visions for ICT, Ethics and the Practice of Teachers. Educ Inf Technol 10, 21–32 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10639-005-6745-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10639-005-6745-6