Title: Learning from ICT Test Bed
1Learning from ICT Test Bed
- Claire Gill
- Head of Institutional Support Servicesclaire.gill
_at_becta.org.uk
23 clusters 3 LEAs, 28 schools 3 colleges
Collaborationsupport
Funding
Implementationsupport
Learning teaching advice guidance
Leadership, workforceinstitutional advice
guidance
Evaluation Support
3Project aims
- Establish how ICT enables transformational change
and raises standards - Gather evidence on how ICT brings about
improvements in educational endeavour - Disseminate the lessons learnt from the project
- Institutional objectives
- Institutional improvement and raising standards
- Improved leadership and management
- More effective and efficient use of teacher time
- Cluster objectives
- Collaboration and some aspects of federation
- Improved home and community links
4Test Bed clusters
- Barking and Dagenham LEA
- Three comprehensive schools Barking Abbey,
Eastbury and Warren with a selection (6) of
their feeder junior and Infant schools - Durham LEA
- Parkside Comprehensive, Willington its main (9)
feeder primary schools and a special school which
supports the cluster - Sandwell LEA
- Shireland Language College and its main (7)
feeder primary schools (part of the Smethwick
Learning Network) plus the pupil referral unit - Plus one FE college in each cluster
5The timescale and funding
- Four year project to August 2006
- Final evaluation report January 2007
- with possible extension for follow-up
- Started work in June 2002
- LEAs selected in August, Schools Sept 02
- School/cluster planning started October
- Formal launch November 2002
- Plans approved end March 03
- Funding
- Year 1 20 million
- Years 2-4 7m, 4m, 3m (estimated)
6Learning from ICT Test Bed
- Guy Underwood Matt Goodyear
- London Borough of
- Barking Dagenham
7Reasons
- Raise standards
- Engage learners
- Enrich the learning experience
- Empower teachers
- Disseminate best practice
8Approaches
- Driven by teaching learning
- Collaboration across institutions
- Developed partnerships
- Clear ownership vision
9Impacts
- Embedded use of technologies
- Enhanced the way we teach
- Increased pupil interaction
- Improved communication
- Created a sustained buzz
10Interactive Technologies
- Technology for teaching learning
- Complete solution
- Easy to use
- Builds on strengths
- Encourages collaboration
11Digital Imaging
- Powerful self assessment tool
- Inclusive tool for expression
- Flexible range of outputs
- Facilitates collaboration
12Visioning
- What will future state look like?
- Time to think, discuss communicate
- Ownership to achieve vision
- Structured toolset
13Leadership management
- Empowers leadership at all levels
- Provides tools resources
- Enables the sharing of best practice
- Power of network applications
- Improved communication
14Closing thoughts
- Have a clear and communicated vision
- Keep teaching learning at the core
- Develop strong and sustainable partnerships
- Build on existing strengths
- Consider total cost of implementing ICT
15Preliminary Outcomes of the Test Bed Evaluation
- Bridget Somekh
- Manchester Metropolitan University
- Jean Underwood
- Nottingham Trent University
16Purpose of the Evaluation
- The external evaluation is assessing whether, to
what extent and how the objectives of the Test
Bed policy have been met, identifying challenges
encountered and lessons learnt. - The internal evaluation, in partnership with
project participants, is using an action research
approach to support the development of good
practice and its dissemination.
17Quantitative approaches
- Benchmarking Test Bed schools/colleges against 4
comparators no findings till Yr 2 - Maturity modelling. Production of framework on
six dimensions for assessing school / college
maturity. No findings till Yr 2 - Base-line data giving staff and student
attitudes, self-assessments and perceptions in
2002-03 (data set completed by Sept 03)
18Findings from Base-line Data
- The majority of staff and students have positive
attitudes to the use of ICT and already use it. - There is a clear relationship between level and
amount of training and diversity level of ICT
use. - KS1/KS2 children showed very positive attitudes
to using ICT at home and at school.Secondary
pupils reported extensive experience of using ICT
and were confident about teaching othersFE
students were more cautious about their ICT
skills.
19Progress in Action Research
- Seventy staff (teachers, managers, support staff)
have embarked on action research studies. - Five reports are complete and will shortly be
published on the TB Evaluation pages in the Becta
research site. - Some staff of schools/colleges are presenting
their action research at the ITTE Conference in
July and the Collaborative Action Research
Conference in November. - Those who have completed action research studies
are taking on the role of Research Leaders.
20The external qualitative evaluation
- Preliminary positive outcomes
- Use of ICT has increased hugely across all
participating schools and participating
courses/sectors of the FE colleges. - Very substantial use of interactive white boards
and, in Barking and Dagenham, large screens,
visualisers and interactive tablets. - Most use of ICT for teaching and learning is to
support and enhance existing practice. - Some use is radical and innovatory e.g. changing
the quality, depth and relevance of pupils
learning.
21- Challenges of Test Bed implementation
- Scale and complexity of roll-out substantial
delay till equipment in place (inevitable with
large ICT initiatives). Way forward plan
future projects to take this into account. - The vision challenge even with excellent advice
its hard to plan because you need a mental
model of the possibilities.Way forward visits
to other schools to see what they have done. - The installation challenge two phases of
funding security contractors, electricians,
builders Way forward use the two phases of
funding to try out new equipment and modify as
needed for phase two.
22- Challenges of Test Bed implementation (2)
- The technical support challenge technical
support is essential in ICT-rich institutions.
Test Bed provided additional support but also
generated greatly increased need. Way forward -
an onsite technician (who can troubleshoot
immediately) transforms ICT use in primary
schools.Way forward - technicians could begin to
provide more support for learners in classrooms,
once maintaining functionality is less of a
problem. - The training challengeWay forward match
training to need, synchronise with arrival of
equipment, include follow-up and peer support
23- Challenges of Test Bed implementation (3)
- The challenge of embedding ICT in teaching and
learning currently almost all use of ICT for
teaching curriculum (i.e. not for teaching ICT)
is limited to use of IWB and Screens/
Visualisers/ Tablets. Use of ICT by pupils in
school is very limited by comparison with their
use at home.Way forward need for
experimentation, monitoring, refinement this is
the main focus of TB action research - The challenge of leadership and management
- The challenge of cluster collaboration
- The challenge of home and community links
24- Congratulations to the Heads/Principals of Test
Bed Schools and Colleges on the considerable
success achieved in the initial stages of
planning, procurement, installation of equipment,
experimentation with use, staff training . and
all the rest - And to the Becta support team and LEA Test Bed
managers
25Learning from ICT Test Bed
- Tim Rudd
- Evidence and Evaluation TeamTimothy.Rudd_at_becta.or
g.uk - www.becta.org.uk/research
26- Establish how ICT enables transformational change
and raises standards - Impact on learning and teaching in institutions
is already visible - Institutions experiencing real change (supported
NRT) - New ways of working emerging novel ICT
solutions being tried - Visual kinaesthetic learning overcoming
barriers - Teachers, Leaders, and support staff gaining new
skills - Perceptual changes ICT vision emerging
27Project aims
- Institutional improvement and raising standards
- Improved leadership and management
- Change management approaches making a difference
- More effective and efficient use of teacher time
- LSPs ICT use and support
- Perennial difficulties of measuring impact of ICT
on standards
28- Collaboration and some aspects of federation
- Improved home and community links
- Home-School-Community Links are a key development
- Improved communication between parents and
schools - Greater parental and community involvement and
support for schools - Area for further development
29- Gather evidence on how ICT brings about
improvements in educational endeavour - Evaluation ongoing quantitative and qualitative
study until 2006 - Maturity Model, new tool for data collection
analysis, developed - Lessons all schools and colleges can learn from
- Moving from implementation to embedding
- Institutions now finalising plans for 2004/05
activity - Today project as a whole enters second stage-
greater external dissemination and profile raising
30- Disseminate the lessons learnt from the project
- Dissemination starting
- Research Conference(s)
- First project newsletter out
- Schools and colleges presenting with and without
us at non Becta events - First Year evaluation findings being disseminated
and second year findings emerging - Questions and lessons learned so far being asked
for by policy teams - Broadening reach at DfES
- Evaluation Action Research projects providing
CPD and cross promotion