Summary of Journal 12
Teachers’ Beliefs and Technology Practices: A Mixed-methods Approach
Deniz Palak, New York
Institute of Technology
Richard T. Walls,
West Virginia University
In a sequential mixed methods
design, the research examined the relationship between teachers’ beliefs and
their instructional technology practices among technology-using teachers who
worked at technology-rich schools to ultimately describe if change in practice
toward a student-centered paradigm occurred. The integrated mixed-methods
results provide evidence for the following: (a) teachers use technology most
frequently for preparation, management, and administrative purposes; (b)
teachers’ use of technology to support student-centered practice is rare even
among those who work at technology-rich schools and hold student-centered
beliefs; (c) teachers in technology-rich schools continue to use technology in
ways that support their already existing teacher-centered instructional
practices. We conclude that future technology professional development efforts
need to focus on integration of technology into curriculum via student-centered
pedagogy while attending to multiple contextual conditions under which teacher
practice takes place. Future technology research must use mixed methods and
consider teachers’ beliefs if change in practice is the desired outcome.
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