Teachers’ resistance to taking up a technological innovation: a case study
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Date
2019-09
Authors
Lötter, Theunis Christiaan
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Abstract
There are clear pressures on educators to innovate through the use of ICTs. iPads and
Google Docs are ICT tools that have become preferable in some contexts. This paper
investigates the take-up of a technological innovation, using iPads and Google Docs, by
three Geography educators. This study reviews the affordances that ICTs make available
to educators, as well as the knowledge structure through which educators come to know
and use ICTs in order to take advantage of these affordances. An account is given of the
pressures to take up and adapt technological innovations by teachers, as well as the
success factors already investigated in literature. This investigation seeks to answer the
question: do teachers take up the technological innovation and, if so, why? However,
review of the adapted documents showed that the educators did not take up the
technological innovation completely, specifically with regard to the tool. The HOD and
the educators were interviewed with the goal of describing their beliefs and reasoning
behind the innovation and its take-up. The case study found that educator knowledge of
a tool should allow them to use it in the manner for which it was designed. If a tool is
designed for generative use and educator knowledge does not allow them to use the tool
in that way, as was the case in this study, use will remain representational or absent.
Description
A research report submitted to the School of Education, Faculty of Humanities,
University of the Witwatersrand in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the
degree of Masters of Education, Johannesburg, September 2019