The evolution of ARTI: An online tool to promote classroom-based technology outcomes via teacher inquiry
K. Dawson, C. Cavanaugh, and A. Ritzhaupt. Proceedings of Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference, 2009, page 36 - 41. Chesapeake, VA, Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education (AACE), (2009)
Abstract
It is widely recognized that action research leads to a series of benefits for teachers including improved practice, heightened professionalism and activism for positive educational change. More recent research has also suggested that teacher inquiry is a vehicle through which teachers can systematically and intentionally study the ways that technology integration impacts student learning and as a lens through which teachers may experience conceptual change regarding their beliefs about technology integration practices. However, lessons learned from teacher inquiries are rarely shared beyond the school or district level. ARTI (Action Research for Technology Integration) is an online tool designed to support the aggregation of action research results from many classrooms. This presentations (1) describes the 3-year evolution of ARTI, (2) shares classroom-based outcomes of technology use in 17 Florida districts and (3) describes plans making ARTI available for wide scale use by prospective and practicing teachers.
Description
The evolution of ARTI: An online tool to promote classroom-based technology outcomes via teacher inquiry - Learning & Technology Library (LearnTechLib)
%0 Conference Paper
%1 dawson2009
%A Dawson, K.
%A Cavanaugh, C.
%A Ritzhaupt, A. D.
%B Proceedings of Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference
%C Chesapeake, VA
%D 2009
%E Gibson, I.
%E Weber, R.
%E McFerrin, K.
%E Carlsen, R.
%E Willis, D.
%I Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education (AACE)
%K 2009 myown proceeding tech_integration
%N 1
%P 36 - 41
%T The evolution of ARTI: An online tool to promote classroom-based technology outcomes via teacher inquiry
%U https://www.editlib.org/p/30557
%V 2009
%X It is widely recognized that action research leads to a series of benefits for teachers including improved practice, heightened professionalism and activism for positive educational change. More recent research has also suggested that teacher inquiry is a vehicle through which teachers can systematically and intentionally study the ways that technology integration impacts student learning and as a lens through which teachers may experience conceptual change regarding their beliefs about technology integration practices. However, lessons learned from teacher inquiries are rarely shared beyond the school or district level. ARTI (Action Research for Technology Integration) is an online tool designed to support the aggregation of action research results from many classrooms. This presentations (1) describes the 3-year evolution of ARTI, (2) shares classroom-based outcomes of technology use in 17 Florida districts and (3) describes plans making ARTI available for wide scale use by prospective and practicing teachers.
%@ 978-1-880094-67-9
@inproceedings{dawson2009,
abstract = {It is widely recognized that action research leads to a series of benefits for teachers including improved practice, heightened professionalism and activism for positive educational change. More recent research has also suggested that teacher inquiry is a vehicle through which teachers can systematically and intentionally study the ways that technology integration impacts student learning and as a lens through which teachers may experience conceptual change regarding their beliefs about technology integration practices. However, lessons learned from teacher inquiries are rarely shared beyond the school or district level. ARTI (Action Research for Technology Integration) is an online tool designed to support the aggregation of action research results from many classrooms. This presentations (1) describes the 3-year evolution of ARTI, (2) shares classroom-based outcomes of technology use in 17 Florida districts and (3) describes plans making ARTI available for wide scale use by prospective and practicing teachers.},
added-at = {2017-03-12T19:51:42.000+0100},
address = {Chesapeake, VA},
author = {Dawson, K. and Cavanaugh, C. and Ritzhaupt, A. D.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/21f0d57884762ac48feb6f624876a4fa6/aritzhaupt},
booktitle = {Proceedings of Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference },
description = {The evolution of ARTI: An online tool to promote classroom-based technology outcomes via teacher inquiry - Learning & Technology Library (LearnTechLib)},
editor = {Gibson, I. and Weber, R. and McFerrin, K. and Carlsen, R. and Willis, D.},
interhash = {a1bb34387df506084523b15f37bf3978},
intrahash = {1f0d57884762ac48feb6f624876a4fa6},
isbn = {978-1-880094-67-9},
keywords = {2009 myown proceeding tech_integration},
number = 1,
pages = {36 - 41},
publisher = {Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education (AACE)},
timestamp = {2017-03-15T14:36:12.000+0100},
title = { The evolution of ARTI: An online tool to promote classroom-based technology outcomes via teacher inquiry },
url = {https://www.editlib.org/p/30557},
volume = 2009,
year = 2009
}