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Edited by Dr. Lynne Schrum, University of Utah
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| formerly Journal of Research on Computing in
Education |
Volume 36 Number 4 Summer
2004
Appropriation, Mastery
and Resistance
to Technology in Early Childhood Preservice Teacher
Education
James Laffey
University of MissouriColumbia
Abstract
This report describes how early childhood preservice teachers
appropriate, master,
and/or resist learning to use technology in teaching. The data
collected were
part of a three-year study supported by the National Science
Foundation of an
entire teacher education program to investigate how preservice
teachers (PSTs)
become socialized to the role of teaching and how they develop as
technology
using teachers in a technology-rich teacher education program. The
article presents
survey data from all the students in the program, focus group and
interview
data with a cohort of early childhood PSTs, and intensive case studies
with
two early childhood PSTs with data from their freshman to their senior
years.
The findings suggest that the pathway to appropriation of technology
as a teacher
is not uni-dimensional and has a varying set of contributors and
constraints.
Contributors
James Laffey is an associate professor in the School of Information
Science
and Learning Technologies at the University of MissouriColumbia. He
earned
his PhD from the University of Chicago.
Download
the full article (PDF, 489 KB, PDF Instructions
Contact
James M. Laffey
221 L Townsend Hall
School of Information Science and Learning Technologies
University of MissouriColumbia
Columbia, MO 65211
LaffeyJ@missouri.edu
Copyright © 2004, ISTE (International Society for Technology
in Education).
All rights reserved.
| technology, teacher education, early childhood, appropriation, resistance |
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