Turel, Y.K., & Johnson, T. E. (2012). Teachers’ belief
and use of interactive whiteboards for teaching and learning. Educational Technology & Society, 15
(1), 381-394.
This research was a quantitative descriptive study of
teachers in Turkey who regularly use interactive whiteboards (IWB). The authors
investigated teacher’s perceptions about the frequency of their IWB use and
their feelings of competence. The authors determined the most commonly used
features of IWB’s in this group of educators as well as how they developed
skill in its use and what training topics they felt were needed. Three themes
were investigated, instructional effects, motivational effects and usability.
Not surprisingly, the authors found that teacher skill
increased with their frequency of use. Most teachers agreed that IWB’s are
motivating, engaging and enjoyable for teachers and students. One of the problems of IWB use is the need for
appropriate skills and knowledge. Because most teachers were found to have had
only one training session provided by their school, or IWB vendor, the training
is deemed superficial. The authors defined a range of use between using the
device as a chalk board, to using hyperlinks, or incompetent to professional.
Most of the respondents in this self-identified in the mid-range of the
competent range, and revealed that most of what they know was gleaned from
colleagues.
This article is helpful because not much is mentioned in the
nursing literature about the use of interactive white boards. Though the participants in this research study
were K-12 teachers, nursing schools could benefit from the positive impact this
technology has on helping students become active learners and engage. The IWB
adds the benefit of reaching many different learning styles, such as visual,
auditory and kinetic. Turel and Johnson point out that the more experience
teachers have with IWB’s, the more features they use. As teachers become
advanced users of IWB’s, they are able to “construct meaning using interactive
and fluid lesson strategies” (p. 383). Research about effectiveness of
interactive whiteboards is needed in the field of nursing education.
IWBs are surprisingly absent from many nursing environments but I expect that to change. Results from the piece were not surprising but it one role of research is to confirm our "gut" reactions and basic thinking. Now you can explain how IWBs affect teaching and learning with grounding in the literature. Glad this piece was useful.
ReplyDelete