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ICT Fluency and High Schools
Planning Committee on ICT Fluency and High School Graduation Outcomes | Board on Science Education | Board on Testing and Assessment | Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education
ICT Fluency and High Schools
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A01=Board on Science Education
A01=Board on Testing and Assessment
A01=Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education
A01=Planning Committee on ICT Fluency and High School Graduation Outcomes
Author_Board on Science Education
Author_Board on Testing and Assessment
Author_Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education
Author_Planning Committee on ICT Fluency and High School Graduation Outcomes
Category=JNDH
eq_bestseller
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Product details
- ISBN 9780309102469
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 26 Aug 2006
- Publisher: National Academies Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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Information and communications technology (ICT) pervades virtually all domains of modern life-educational, professional, social, and personal. Yet although there have been numerous calls for linkages that enable ICT competencies acquired in one domain to benefit another, this goal has largely remained unrealized. In particular, while technology skills and applications at work could be greatly enhanced by earlier complementary learning at school-particularly in K-12 education, a formative and influential stage in a person's life-little progress has been made on such linkages. At present, the curricula of most U.S. high schools focus on skills in the use of tools such as specific word-processing software or contemporary Internet search engines. Although these kinds of skills are certainly valuable-at least for a while-they comprise just one component, and the most rudimentary component, of ICT competencies. The National Academies held a workshop in October 2005 to address the specifics of ICT learning during the high school years would require an explicit effort to build on that report.
The workshop was designed to extend the work begun in the report Being Fluent with Information Technology, which identified key components of ICT fluency and discussed their implications for undergraduate education. ICT Fluency and High Schools summarizes the workshop, which had three primary objectives: (1) to examine the need for updates to the ICT-fluency framework presented in the 1999 study; (2) to identify and analyze the most promising current efforts to provide in high schools many of the ICT competencies required not only in the workplace but also in people's day-to-day functioning as citizens; and (3) to consider what information or research is needed to inform efforts to help high school students develop ICT fluency.
Planning Committee on ICT Fluency and High School Graduation Outcomes, National Research Council
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