This study was situated within a year-long, statewide technology integration initiative designed to support technology integration within science, technology, engineering, and math classrooms. It examined the elements used in student artifacts in an attempt to investigate trends in digital artifact creation. Among several conclusions, this examination highlighted areas of significant improvement in student use of technology, such as an increase in the creation of PowerPoint presentations and the inclusion of multimedia elements. The study also highlighted areas for improvement, such as the low cognitive demand for content in the majority of the artifacts.
Description
Examining Student Digital Artifacts During a Year-Long Technology Integration Initiative: Computers in the Schools: Vol 29, No 4
%0 Journal Article
%1 doi:10.1080/07380569.2012.737293
%A Rodriguez, P. M.
%A Frey, C.
%A Dawson, K.
%A Liu, F.
%A Ritzhaupt, A. D.
%D 2012
%J Computers in the Schools
%K 2012 journal myown tech_integration
%N 4
%P 355-374
%R 10.1080/07380569.2012.737293
%T Examining Student Digital Artifacts During a Year-Long Technology Integration Initiative
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07380569.2012.737293
%V 29
%X This study was situated within a year-long, statewide technology integration initiative designed to support technology integration within science, technology, engineering, and math classrooms. It examined the elements used in student artifacts in an attempt to investigate trends in digital artifact creation. Among several conclusions, this examination highlighted areas of significant improvement in student use of technology, such as an increase in the creation of PowerPoint presentations and the inclusion of multimedia elements. The study also highlighted areas for improvement, such as the low cognitive demand for content in the majority of the artifacts.
@article{doi:10.1080/07380569.2012.737293,
abstract = { This study was situated within a year-long, statewide technology integration initiative designed to support technology integration within science, technology, engineering, and math classrooms. It examined the elements used in student artifacts in an attempt to investigate trends in digital artifact creation. Among several conclusions, this examination highlighted areas of significant improvement in student use of technology, such as an increase in the creation of PowerPoint presentations and the inclusion of multimedia elements. The study also highlighted areas for improvement, such as the low cognitive demand for content in the majority of the artifacts. },
added-at = {2017-03-08T05:38:26.000+0100},
author = {Rodriguez, P. M. and Frey, C. and Dawson, K. and Liu, F. and Ritzhaupt, A. D.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/20d49366f01189b542ac8e96f2d89523f/aritzhaupt},
description = {Examining Student Digital Artifacts During a Year-Long Technology Integration Initiative: Computers in the Schools: Vol 29, No 4},
doi = {10.1080/07380569.2012.737293},
eprint = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07380569.2012.737293},
interhash = {dfc6cb51b7433fb0e5f9b1b22158e50b},
intrahash = {0d49366f01189b542ac8e96f2d89523f},
journal = {Computers in the Schools},
keywords = {2012 journal myown tech_integration},
number = 4,
pages = {355-374},
timestamp = {2017-03-15T14:42:00.000+0100},
title = {Examining Student Digital Artifacts During a Year-Long Technology Integration Initiative},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07380569.2012.737293},
volume = 29,
year = 2012
}