TY - JOUR
T1 - How new technology is addressed by researchers in Educational Studies
T2 - Approaches from high-performing universities in China and the UK
AU - Crook, Charles
AU - Gu, Xiaoqing
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 British Educational Research Association
PY - 2019/5
Y1 - 2019/5
N2 - There is a crisis of expectation in relation to educational technology. This is sometimes interpreted as a failure of academic researchers to disseminate their work to educational practitioners. However, another interpretation dwells on the lack of vision characterising such research. Because teachers often encounter research most intensely during their own pre-service and in-service education, we review academic research here through a snapshot of output from 10 leading university Education departments sampled in the UK and China. Empirical papers with a central interest in new technology were scarce, representing only around 10% of the sample. Research was strongly situated in “classroom” contexts, although, as critics have suggested, with limited attention to the wider ecology of those places, and with teachers being the focal interest as much as students. A “learning outcomes” research orientation was less common than an interest in process and practice. Although this was approached with different methodologies in China and the UK. Discussion addresses the challenge of effective and authoritative dissemination and those constraints from the political economy of research practice.
AB - There is a crisis of expectation in relation to educational technology. This is sometimes interpreted as a failure of academic researchers to disseminate their work to educational practitioners. However, another interpretation dwells on the lack of vision characterising such research. Because teachers often encounter research most intensely during their own pre-service and in-service education, we review academic research here through a snapshot of output from 10 leading university Education departments sampled in the UK and China. Empirical papers with a central interest in new technology were scarce, representing only around 10% of the sample. Research was strongly situated in “classroom” contexts, although, as critics have suggested, with limited attention to the wider ecology of those places, and with teachers being the focal interest as much as students. A “learning outcomes” research orientation was less common than an interest in process and practice. Although this was approached with different methodologies in China and the UK. Discussion addresses the challenge of effective and authoritative dissemination and those constraints from the political economy of research practice.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85062067373
U2 - 10.1111/bjet.12750
DO - 10.1111/bjet.12750
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85062067373
SN - 0007-1013
VL - 50
SP - 1173
EP - 1188
JO - British Journal of Educational Technology
JF - British Journal of Educational Technology
IS - 3
ER -