Abstract

I report on postgraduate students conducting survey research on information and communications technology (ICTs) in South African schools, focusing on the notion of e-maturity. The dual emphasis of the paper is on students' collaborative experience of the authentic research process including their experience of e-maturity within the target schools and leads to a discussion in two parts around notions of novice student research and e-maturity. Fifty students, most of them practising teachers, participated collaboratively in the design and implementation of the survey. Discussion in this paper is based on the qualitative analysis of 50 research reports submitted on completion of the survey field work. I analysed the reports inductively for their content using simple in vivo coding techniques and structured quotations into flowing narratives to illuminate both issues. Findings show that the participatory and collaborative nature of the research process contributed markedly to the composition quality of student research reports. Student understanding of the research process through meaningful engagement in authentic field work has also greatly improved their insights into ICTs in education and the current e-maturity of participating schools.

Highlights

  • Introduction: postgraduate students engaging in research projects of limited scope Problems arise when Honours degree students are expected to identify issues around a topic, identify a problem, undertake a small literature review, and address the problem by engaging in field work and analysis of data

  • This paper focuses on the inductive qualitative analysis of student research essays written about this process

  • Because initial studies in this field have been conducted in largely industrialized countries, findings are not necessarily contextually relevant to developing countries. It is unknown whether substantial investments in Information and Communications Technology (ICTs) have had any impact on standards of learning in Gauteng as there has been no systematic investigation into the use of ICTs in Gauteng schools and the e-maturity of these schools

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Summary

Introduction

Findings and discussion around the notion of e-maturity Novice student researchers all admitted to discovering issues in the field of ICTs in education that they had not considered before embarking on the research project. On a more positive note, it can be said that the research reports mention schools where all of these issues are well under control and where ICTs are implemented for teaching and learning.

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