You are here:

High School Mathematics Teachers and Interactive Whiteboards: A Longitudinal Study of 2 Users and 2 Future-Users, Year 3
PROCEEDINGS

, Mill Creek High School (Gwinett County, GA), United States ; , Georgia Southern University, United States

Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference, in San Diego, CA, USA ISBN 978-1-880094-78-5 Publisher: Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education (AACE), Waynesville, NC USA

Abstract

This article summarizes and analyzes interview responses over a three year period of four Georgia high school mathematics teachers regarding their individual perceptions about using interactive whiteboards (IWBs) to teach mathematics. In the first year, two IWB experienced mathematics teachers were asked to describe how IWBs have impacted their mathematics lessons while two mathematics teachers with no IWB experience were asked how they thought the technology would impact their mathematics lessons. In year two and three, the same experienced users and future users were asked follow-up questions about IWBs. Data analysis found that the IWB users were much more comfortable with the technology after the additional years of experience and were trying new pedagogical methods. Future-users generally maintained their well informed perceptions of IWB capabilities and their intended uses of the technology. Professional development and future research questions are noted based on these findings.

Citation

Hall, J. & Chamblee, G. (2010). High School Mathematics Teachers and Interactive Whiteboards: A Longitudinal Study of 2 Users and 2 Future-Users, Year 3. In D. Gibson & B. Dodge (Eds.), Proceedings of SITE 2010--Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference (pp. 3440-3447). San Diego, CA, USA: Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education (AACE). Retrieved March 28, 2024 from .

Keywords

References

View References & Citations Map

These references have been extracted automatically and may have some errors. Signed in users can suggest corrections to these mistakes.

Suggest Corrections to References

Cited By

View References & Citations Map

These links are based on references which have been extracted automatically and may have some errors. If you see a mistake, please contact info@learntechlib.org.