Diverse set
of ICT tools to communicate, create, disseminate, store, and manage
information. In some contexts, ICT has also become integral to the
teaching-learning interaction, through such approaches as replacing chalkboards
with interactive digital whiteboards, using students’ own smartphones or other
devices for learning during class time, and the “flipped classroom” model where
students watch lectures at home on the computer and use classroom time for more
interactive exercises.
When
teachers are digitally literate and trained to use ICT, these approaches can
lead to higher order thinking skills, provide creative and individualized
options for students to express their understandings, and leave students better
prepared to deal with ongoing technological change in society and the
workplace. ICT can provide diverse options
for taking in and processing information, making sense of ideas, and expressing
learning. Over 87% of students learn best through visual and tactile
modalities, and ICT can help these students ‘experience’ the information
instead of just reading and hearing it. Mobile devices can also offer
programmes (“apps”) that provide extra support to students with special needs,
with features such as simplified screens and instructions, consistent placement
of menus and control features, graphics combined with text, audio feedback,
ability to set pace and level of difficulty, appropriate and unambiguous
feedback, and easy error correction.
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