Title: Michel P
1How to assess the effectiveness of ICT use in
schools and classrooms ?
- Michel Pérez, Inspecteur général
- de lEducation nationale (France)
2Summary
- Contributing to the conception and the testing of
a European Framework for the evaluation of ICT in
education (EUN projects P2P and P2V) - Assessment of ICT use in France
- how the French general inspectorate (IGEN)
contributes to the promotion and the assessment
of ICT use - how the French ministry of education tries to
assess innovation (ICT-related or innovation in
general)
3Why inspectors need to assess the use of ICT?
- Digital devices are more and more present in the
teaching process. - Local authorities investing in ICT want to know
what use is made of the equipment and
installations. - New tools and systems appear every day on the
market VLEs (Virtual Learning Environments),
interactive whiteboards, laptops, tablet
computers, one-to-one computing, personal
devices, etc. - We know the benefits of computers in learning
autonomy, self-assessment, personalization of
learning, diversity and remote accessibility of
contents, collaboration and sharing, continuity
of monitoring, etc. - BUT
- We are not sure that an appropriate use is made
of the equipments. - It is currently impossible to accurately assess
the gain provided by digital tools and measure
their contribution to the improvement of
students' skills - (cf. André Tricot, Matt
Richtel Classrooms of the Future, Stagnant Scores
- New York Times 2011). - Efficiency mainly depends on the learning context
and the quality of the teacher is a key element.
4Framework for the evaluation of ICT in
educationA EUROPEAN SCHOOLNET program
- PEER-TO-PEER (P2P) PROJECT FOR INSPECTORATES -
2006 - PEER-TO-VALORIZE (P2V) PROJECT - 2007/2008
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6History and aims of the project
- The framework was developed as part of the
P2P-Inspectorates project. - Its aim was to bring together standards and
indicators as used by several education
inspectorates throughout Europe, revise and
reorder these criteria and present them as one
shared model. - The framework could also be used by individual
schools to self-assess their ICT use and by
groups of schools to carry out peer evaluations. - P2P-Inspectorates was a cooperation between
Ofsted (Office for Standards in Education,
England), Skolverket (Swedish National Agency for
Education, Sweden), HMIE (Her Majesty's
Inspectorate of Education, Scotland), Department
of Education and Science (Ireland), IGEN
(Inspection Générale de lÉducation Nationale,
France) and Inspectie van het Onderwijs (The
Netherlands). - P2P and P2V were co-financed by the European
Commission. The inspectorates work packages of
P2V and P2P were developed under the auspices of
SICI (http//www.sici-inspectorates.eu/) and were
coordinated by The Dutch Inspectorate of
Education.
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7History and aims of the project
- P2V project ("peer learning to valorize" which
succeeded P2P) has enabled the development of a
new framework in an evaluation toolkit containing
instructions, forms, comments and additional
forms of assessment. - The P2V framework has been used by inspectorates
in several European countries to assess the use
of ICT in primary and secondary schools. - The "toolbox" (P2V Work package 6 - entitled
"Inspecting and Evaluating the use of ICT in
schools in Europe was presented by Bert Jaap Van
Oel (Dutch inspector and project coordinator). - Partners in the P2V project were the
inspectorates of Scotland, Sweden, France,
Catalonia, Lithuania and the Netherlands.
8A quick guide to the framework
- The framework is accompanied by a number of
support documents that help its user in gathering
relevant information - a comprehensive user guide that helps the users
of the framework (inspectors or schools) towards
an accurate evaluation - a school questionnaire, which is sent to the
school before the visit and provides useful
information about the schools ICT policy,
hardware, etc. - a lesson observation form, which is used to make
notes during the lessons visited - a guidance sheet for the meeting with teachers
- a guidance sheet for the meeting with students
- a guidance sheet for the meeting with school
management/ICT leadership
9The content of the framework
- The framework consists of three main themes
- Conditions, Use and Outcomes.
- - There are a number of quality areas (eight in
total) within each theme, - - Quality indicators with corresponding evidence
pointers are identified within each area. - Conditions
- C1. Leadership,
- C2. Infrastructure and access,
- C3. Curriculum planning,
- C4. Quality assurance and improvement
- Use
- U1. Pupil use,
- U2. The teaching process,
- U3. Administrative use
- Outcomes
- O1. Impact on learning and standards
- When using the framework, evaluators can indicate
which evidence they found by checking the
appropriate boxes and can accordingly assign a
score to each Quality Indicator.
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13A short review of the results
- The last review meeting held in Brussels in
October 2008 helped to show different lines of
thought. - It should first be noted that ICT have
transformed radically and irrevocably the way we
teach and learn. It is therefore appropriate to
examine carefully these teaching tools and the
modes of learning. - Reflection on the methodology of visits
- The one-day (or more) visits for school
assessment are conducted in several European
countries as part of the evaluation of schools
(which is not the norm in France). - However, in France the grid could be filled at
the time of inspection of teachers and might be
subject to analysis (a self-assessment grid is
included in the toolbox ). - At the end of the visit, a report could be made
to the school management team extended to
representatives of the school board this report
could be an opportunity for fruitful dialogue and
would identifying areas for improvement.
14A short review of the results
- The analysis of the results of evaluations of the
use of ICT in schools visited by country shows
the diversity of situations that depend on
various factors - the size and equipment of schools,
- the educational culture of the school and,
concretely, whether or not the teachers work
together in a dynamic way, - the teaching authority in the school, which is
a factor of coherence, - the use of ICT by students for free access and
personal work (no program involving one-to-one
computing was detected).
15Updating the framework
- The ICT framework was intended to be applied
during schools visits however its administration
is cumbersome and does not allow for instant
reaction. - The framework could evolve into an online tool
allowing - - a self-diagnostic evaluation of the use of ICT,
showing the strengths and weaknesses of the
school - - a dialogue with external assessment in order to
define tracks of progress
16Some assessment activities for the use of ICT in
France
17IGENs activities for the assessment of
innovative uses of ICT
- Permanent monitoring within each specialty
group of general inspectors - Monitoring mission within IGENs ICT committee
(cellule TIC) - Counselling and advising DGESCO experts (DGESCO
General Directorate of School Education) - Supporting reforms and action plans, such as the
DUNE action plan (Développement des Usages du
Numérique à lEcole) or the Ecoles Numériques
Rurales action plan (Digital Rural Schools) - Accompanying innovative experiences, the digital
textbook, for example - Audits and reports at the request of Minister and
local authorities
18An experimental online tool for self-assessment
of schools in France
19Online school self-assessment
- OAPE Overview
- This site is designed as a tool to help schools
in the monitoring of their educational activity. - It includes a set of questions that focus on
current practices involving several actors. - It is used by the head teacher, who is free, if
he wishes to do so, to share the access to OAPE
with other members of the school community. - It consists of four types of tabs
- 5 tabs for the diagnosis (corresponding to the
5 pillars of the schools characteristics and
specificities) - - 1 tab to summarize the various results of the
diagnosis - - 1 tab for the radar chart, a diagram which
provides an immediate and global visualisation of
the diagnosis - - 1 tab for resources.
- With this tool, the head teacher can identify the
pillars of the schools specificities that are
heavily invested and conversely the pillars
that are less so.
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22Experimental audit protocol for the assessment
of a (regional) VLE
- With the participation of IGEN, an audit protocol
was recently devised in the region of Nantes
(Académie), with a view to - verifying how the regional VLE is developing in
the schools - assessing the effective use of the VLE in
schools - this protocol will be applied in order to
- help the schools in their self-assessment
approaches - enter into a process of continuous improvement
- for local authorities
- to make an assessment and provide a tool for
monitoring progress, - to manage the evolution of uses by bringing to
light the points assessed.
23The stages of the protocol
- Collection of information
- Centralised data collected on the VLE
- Two questionnaires a questionnaire for head
teachers, a questionnaire for teachers. No
questionnaire for students. - Visit that comprises verification, interview(s),
instant / on-the-spot debriefing - Written audit report
- Summary of recommendations
24A BRIEF CONCLUSION
- Effective use of ICT in teaching must obviously
be checked ... - to support teachers innovative activity,
- to help them make a fair use of digital devices
in their teaching activity, - to promote substantial progress in the learning
process. - Inspectors need to have some efficient tools to
aid in the evaluation of the use of ICT in
schools. - We need to provide a shared tool, fruit of a
collaborative work. - It should be possible and relevant to develop
this framework into an online tool for
self-diagnosis and remote dialogue preparing the
evaluators visit.