In authors or contributors

Teacher Perspectives on Peer-Peer Collaboration and Education Technologies in Rural Tanzanian Classrooms

Resource type
Conference Paper
Authors/contributors
Title
Teacher Perspectives on Peer-Peer Collaboration and Education Technologies in Rural Tanzanian Classrooms
Abstract
Teachers’ perspectives are critical for understanding classroom culture. They create and enforce rules in classrooms and are responsible for educating students using methods that they perceive to be most effective. Therefore, creating supplementary education technologies without understanding teachers and the culture they promote may lead to interventions that are underutilized or ineffective. Our research specifically investigates how technologies that foster student collaboration fit into teachers’ views of learning in a rural context with limited existing collaboration scaffolds. We interviewed 24 teachers and observed 39 classrooms in a rural Tanzanian village to understand how teachers value peer-peer collaboration in their teaching practice, and the unique challenges they face educating students in rural classroom settings. We uncover insights that inform the design and deployment of supplementary education technologies to support teachers in rural Tanzania and similar demographics.
Date
June 28, 2021
Proceedings Title
ACM SIGCAS Conference on Computing and Sustainable Societies
Place
New York, NY, USA
Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery
Pages
14–26
Series
COMPASS '21
ISBN
978-1-4503-8453-7
Accessed
2022-04-29
Library Catalogue
ACM Digital Library
Citation
Uchidiuno, J., Koedinger, K., & Ogan, A. (2021). Teacher Perspectives on Peer-Peer Collaboration and Education Technologies in Rural Tanzanian Classrooms. ACM SIGCAS Conference on Computing and Sustainable Societies, 14–26. https://doi.org/10.1145/3460112.3471939