Policy Unplugged: Dis/Connections Between Technology Policy and Practices in Canadian Schools
The integration of technology into Canadian public schools remains an illusive goal for policy-makers and educators who believe that investment in computers yields concrete results. Policy Unplugged documents the realities of computer use in schools and unveils the often hidden barriers to teachers' integration efforts.

The authors conducted a two-year study on the implementation of computer technologies, including in-depth interviews and classroom observation at thirty-two elementary and secondary schools across Canada. Based on this research, Policy Unplugged explores the intersections and disconnections between provincial technology policy, school board policy, and school-based practices. The authors consider the ways in which technology policy has become "unplugged" from daily experience, showing that teachers, students, and administrators are part of complex pedagogical and social systems that have been badly served by the enforced and hasty introduction of technology. They also show how small, often unquestioned practices and power relations in schools can create seemingly insurmountable impediments to technological implementation.
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Policy Unplugged: Dis/Connections Between Technology Policy and Practices in Canadian Schools
The integration of technology into Canadian public schools remains an illusive goal for policy-makers and educators who believe that investment in computers yields concrete results. Policy Unplugged documents the realities of computer use in schools and unveils the often hidden barriers to teachers' integration efforts.

The authors conducted a two-year study on the implementation of computer technologies, including in-depth interviews and classroom observation at thirty-two elementary and secondary schools across Canada. Based on this research, Policy Unplugged explores the intersections and disconnections between provincial technology policy, school board policy, and school-based practices. The authors consider the ways in which technology policy has become "unplugged" from daily experience, showing that teachers, students, and administrators are part of complex pedagogical and social systems that have been badly served by the enforced and hasty introduction of technology. They also show how small, often unquestioned practices and power relations in schools can create seemingly insurmountable impediments to technological implementation.
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Policy Unplugged: Dis/Connections Between Technology Policy and Practices in Canadian Schools

Policy Unplugged: Dis/Connections Between Technology Policy and Practices in Canadian Schools

by Jennifer Jenson
Policy Unplugged: Dis/Connections Between Technology Policy and Practices in Canadian Schools

Policy Unplugged: Dis/Connections Between Technology Policy and Practices in Canadian Schools

by Jennifer Jenson

eBook

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Overview

The integration of technology into Canadian public schools remains an illusive goal for policy-makers and educators who believe that investment in computers yields concrete results. Policy Unplugged documents the realities of computer use in schools and unveils the often hidden barriers to teachers' integration efforts.

The authors conducted a two-year study on the implementation of computer technologies, including in-depth interviews and classroom observation at thirty-two elementary and secondary schools across Canada. Based on this research, Policy Unplugged explores the intersections and disconnections between provincial technology policy, school board policy, and school-based practices. The authors consider the ways in which technology policy has become "unplugged" from daily experience, showing that teachers, students, and administrators are part of complex pedagogical and social systems that have been badly served by the enforced and hasty introduction of technology. They also show how small, often unquestioned practices and power relations in schools can create seemingly insurmountable impediments to technological implementation.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780773560420
Publisher: McGill-Queens University Press
Publication date: 08/13/2007
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Jennifer Jenson is associate professor, pedagogy and technology, York University, and co-editor of Worlds in Play: International Perspectives on Digital Games Research.

Chloë Brushwood Rose is assistant professor, curriculum theory, education, York Uni

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