Technology and knowledge. In what way are knowledge and teachers’ knowledge practices in subject areas crucial for the integration of technology in education?

In recent decades, education has undergone a digital transformation. In Norway, the government’s digitalization strat-egy for education includes ambitious goals and plans, with expectations of new forms of teaching and learning, betterlearning, and improved learning outcomes. Despite the increased a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nordic Journal of Digital Literacy
Main Authors: Bratland, Erik, El Ghami, Mohamed, Mediå, Morten
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3026429
https://doi.org/10.18261/njdl.17.3.2
Description
Summary:In recent decades, education has undergone a digital transformation. In Norway, the government’s digitalization strat-egy for education includes ambitious goals and plans, with expectations of new forms of teaching and learning, betterlearning, and improved learning outcomes. Despite the increased availability of technology in Norwegian schools,there is still a significant gap between available technology in the classroom and teachers’ use of this technology foreducational purposes. This paper is based on Legitimation Code Theory (LCT) and explores teachers’ understandingof subject-area knowledge practices. Drawing on an empirical survey of a number of schools in northern Norway,completed in 2018/19, this paper uses one dimension of LCT to explore and compare the organized principles under-lying teachers’ knowledge practices in the key subjects of mathematics and Norwegian. An analysis suggests a code‘clash’ with mathematics and a code ‘match’ with Norwegian, which may help explain their different patterns of tech-nology integration. This research provides new perspectives on the integration of technology in education and sug-gests that different forms of subject-area knowledge have varying effects on teachers’ knowledge practices with theuse of technology in schools. This insight, which reveals the importance of knowledge and knowledge practices, willhave an impact on strategies for integrating technology in schools and on measures that can promote better learningin subjects using technology in education, publishedVersion