Abstract

Despite recent emphasis on the quality of education for all in South Africa, the department of education still face major challenges that hinder the progress of implementing quality education, especially in the rural areas. Consequently, this study followed an action qualitative method. The overall purpose of the study was to determine the influence of ICT integration in on the quality of teaching and learning in the classroom and to further examine the benefits of using ICT to enhance personal growth, individual performance, critical thinking skills reading and writing skills. The research questions were semi-structured and open-ended. The researcher interviewed nine (9) learners and seven (7) teachers in a two session focus group, first session involved only teachers and last session had only grade 12 learners. The themes of the sessions were documented separately, however, relationship between the themes were identified. The study also performed observation in the classroom to access situations that would have been almost impossible to identify in an interview or a questionnaire. Results shown that a lot still need to be done by the government to initiate the process of integrating ICT in education or empower teachers with ICT skill and to do away with the traditional teaching method. The study however concluded on the positive influence of ICT integration on teaching and learning practices in the classroom for both teachers and learners. Consequently, the study recommends the following: government must provide training and incentives to encourage personal development in teachers and for young graduates to value teaching; policies about lost equipment must be drafted and understood by all parties; deployments of technology innovation, as well, as the imperatives of following the recommendation of UNESCO’s four stages of ICT integration

Highlights

  • IntroductionThere is a multitude of published challenges that causes the downward trend of matric performance such as under-qualified teachers, lack of school libraries, not enough textbooks for the learner, lack of motivation to push to learn from their communities and societies, and no culture of reading (Meenakshi, 2013; Faggella-Luby & Deshler, 2008)

  • The challenges of education in South Africa are not new, there were always visible from Bantu education, to 1994 when South African was promised the quality of education in a new democratic country and up to now the department of basic education is still addressing the challenges of quality education

  • Information Communication Technology (ICT) can provide a pedagogical framework that enables learner’s to become effective independent learners; for example, computer games and other assessment software are available that can adjust themselves to the level of competency of the students and move to the level as they improve their thinking skills

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Summary

Introduction

There is a multitude of published challenges that causes the downward trend of matric performance such as under-qualified teachers, lack of school libraries, not enough textbooks for the learner, lack of motivation to push to learn from their communities and societies, and no culture of reading (Meenakshi, 2013; Faggella-Luby & Deshler, 2008). This shortcoming of school education poses a tremendous challenge in higher education because student enters into the higher education institutions academically unprepared. The research done by the Council of Higher Education (CHE) in 2015 stated that more than half of the student

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