Global Forces, Local Needs, and ICT-Supported Innovations in Small Countries and Developing Regions: Overcoming the Misalignment: An Editorial Introduction.- The Research Agenda for Technology, Education, and Development: Taking Stock and Looking Ahead.- Technology for Education in Low-Income Countries: Supporting the UN Sustainable Development Goals.- ICT Curriculum Planning and Development: Policy and Implementation Lessons from Small Developing States.- New Challenges for ICT in Education Policies in Developing Countries: The Need to Account for the Widespread Use of ICT for Teaching and Learning Outside the School.- Implementing Sustainable ICT-Supported Innovation Policies: Case of Universitas Terbuka – Indonesia.- Playful Partnerships for Game-Based Learning in International Contexts.- Impatience as a Virtue: Addressing Persistent ICT-in-Education Challenges in Small Developing Countries.
Dr. Ian A. Lubin is a professional educator and research scientist specializing in learning and instructional psychology, educational technologies, and international education development. He has served as an instructional faculty and researcher at various national and international institutions. Dr. Lubin is the author of several journal articles, chapters, working papers, and other consultation publications on the design of optimal learning environments, cognition and motivation for learning, utilization of instructional technologies, teacher/faculty professional development, and education for development in international contexts. Dr. Lubin serves as a specialist advisor to international development organizations and agencies such as UNESCO and the Commonwealth of Learning. He holds undergraduate degrees in Psychology and Multimedia Instructional Design and earned his M.Ed. and Ph.D. degrees in Instructional Psychology and Technology.
This timely analysis brings greater clarity to the question of how ICT-supported innovations are experienced in small low- to middle-income countries and developing regions with implications for international education and development. By bringing together a group of international technologists, researchers, and scholars, this book explores the building of local capacity for educational technology policy and application in such regions and ably links theory to practice to illuminate how the issues at hand play out in professional practice. The volume offers itself as an invaluable resource by offering a salient assessment of the existent methodological and ecological challenges and constraints in developing, implementing, and evaluating technology and technology research, while simultaneously providing recommendations and strategy for future policy and implementation.
Among the topics covered:
The research agenda for technology, education, and development.
ICT curriculum planning and development: policy and implementation lessons from small developing states.
New challenges for ICT in education policies in developing countries.
Playful partnerships for game-based learning in international contexts.
Addressing persistent ICT-in-education challenges in small developing countries.
ICT-Supported Innovations in Small Countries and Developing Regions is of significant interest to educational technology researchers, policymakers, and officials with influence over resource allocation and implementation of technology innovations. It is also relevant to administrators, teachers, instructional designers, and technology evaluators interested in advancing educational communications and technology in public and private settings.