Doris Choy
National Institute of Education
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Featured researches published by Doris Choy.
Journal of research on technology in education | 2009
Doris Choy; Angela F. L. Wong; Ping Gao
Abstract The purpose of the study is to explore student teachers’ intentions and actions in technology integration in their classrooms. A postgraduate teacher education cohort of 118 Singapore student teachers participated in the study. The results suggested that student teachers in Singapore showed positive intentions to integrate technology to facilitate student-centered learning in their future teaching. However, they reported that they were more likely to use technology as a supporting and instructional tool during their student teaching rather than using technology to promote student-centered learning. Qualitative findings from 10 purposefully selected participants showed consistency with the quantitative results. The results of the study helped to better exemplify the student teachers intentions and their actions in integrating technology into their classrooms.
Journal of Research in Childhood Education | 2008
Jinyoung Kim; Doris Choy
Abstract This study investigated preservice teachers perspectives of integrating music in their third year of a childhood teacher education program. Preservice teachers were enrolled in a multidisciplinary course in which they learned about integrating music and had opportunities to implement such knowledge into practical teaching. One hundred sixty preservice teachers in a childhood education program from an urban public university participated in the study. They wrote reflective journals every week and also filled out surveys at the beginning and the end of the multidisciplinary course. Quantitative and qualitative data of preservice teachers perspectives and confidence in music and music teaching were analyzed before and after the course in terms of knowledge, skills, and attitudes. The results indicated that the preservice teachers had positive attitudes toward incorporating music and had high expectations towards classroom teachers teaching with music. Upon completion of the multidisciplinary course, the preservice teachers knowledge and confidence in incorporating musical concepts improved significantly; they also perceived themselves as more confident in teaching children in various age groups from pre-kindergarten to 5th grade. In addition, at the end of the course, they continued to hold positive attitudes toward incorporating music and high expectations to teach music in a classroom.
Archive | 2017
Seng Chee Tan; Horn Mun Cheah; Wenli Chen; Doris Choy
This chapter aims to uncover the adaptive success factors of ICT integration in Singapore’s education system, to illustrate the trajectory of these factors over time, and to distil the lessons learnt into broad principles that can benefit educators or researchers working in other contexts. It traces the changes of various factors that evolve with the three ICT Masterplans, including the development of human infrastructure, ideas generation, ideas interactions and translation, support structure, and physical infrastructure. Rising above these factors that are context-bound, it derives broader principles that have underpinned the ICT integration effort: working as a complex adaptive system, adopting an ecological perspective, learning from critics and feedback, taking a long-term view for iterative improvement.
Archive | 2017
Seng Chee Tan; Horn Mun Cheah; Wenli Chen; Doris Choy
To integrate ICT into schools for effective instruction and learning, ICT infrastructure and resources are the fundamental and essential structural issues that need to be established before higher-level goals such as pedagogical innovation can be achieved. This chapter describes the development of ICT environment in Singapore for the country and more specific programmes and initiatives for the school environments. Led by the IDA, Singapore has been propelled to among the top countries in the world with regard to ICT pervasiveness and usage through more than 30 years of continual and coordinated effort. Unique to education, the three successive ICT Masterplans in education from 1997 to 2014 have continually upgraded the schools’ ICT infrastructure that facilitates pedagogical innovations. For example, the student-to-computer ratios have been improving in all schools, from 6.6 students to 1 computer to a flexible environment that includes 1:1 computing. Provision of learning management systems became pervasive in all schools. In terms of resources, the support has evolved from provision of CD-ROMs to development of one-stop Internet portals that consolidate access to all digital resources. Access to the Internet has been upgraded in terms of connection speed and availability of the broadband wireless network. Finally, student’s home computing environments are improving through various schemes.
Archive | 2017
Seng Chee Tan; Horn Mun Cheah; Wenli Chen; Doris Choy
This chapter reports the outcomes of the ICT Masterplans in Singapore with regard to their impact on students, teachers, curriculum, and pedagogical practices in classrooms. It draws evidence from various sources of information, including websites from the Singapore’s MOE, UNESCO reports, international comparison studies, and academic publications. In general, the results show that over 18 years and across three ICT in Education Masterplans, Singapore’s education system is making steady progress in creating favourable learning environments and practices that leverage the power of technologies. Few valuable lessons can be drawn from this effort. First, it demonstrates the approaches that bridge the policy–practice divide; second, it shows how evaluation are used as a means not so much to prove the achievements but to improve the systems; third, it has evolved to an evaluation approach that aims at creating information for timely feedback to improve the implementation, as well as information to feedforward for subsequent iterative improvement of the policies.
Archive | 2017
Seng Chee Tan; Horn Mun Cheah; Wenli Chen; Doris Choy
This chapter focuses on R&D programmes and initiatives relating to ICT integration in Singapore schools. Three broad strategies underpin this R&D effort: engaging multiple stakeholders and partners, creating real and wide impact in schools, and achieving synergy between top–down policy and ground–up effort. It is thus a system-wide coordinated effort to engage multiple parties so that findings and products from R&D will ultimately benefit students in schools. This chapter provides details of various research programmes and initiatives, including the Incubator School Scheme that evolved into the LEAD ICT@Schools programme, FS@SG programme, learning sciences research at the NIE, the NRF’s strategic research programme on IDM in education, the eduLab programme, and finally school’s action research.
Archive | 2017
Seng Chee Tan; Horn Mun Cheah; Wenli Chen; Doris Choy
This chapter discusses the integration of ICT into education as a worldwide phenomenon, which is evident from the presence of ICT policies in education in most developed and developing nations. It analyses the key driving forces that shape this development from various perspectives, including political, technological, economic, social, and learning aspects. Critically, ICT has afforded new TL each factor feeds into others and is reciprocally being shaped by others. The resultant outcome is the continuous impact of ICT in education with increasing influence. However, to implement ICT integration in schools successfully, we also need to be cognizant of the critical voices against such move and empirical evidence of potential challenges. Such information is valuable in developing a systemic and systematic approach for ICT integration in schools.
Archive | 2017
Seng Chee Tan; Horn Mun Cheah; Wenli Chen; Doris Choy
This chapter describes innovative technology-mediated practices in Singapore schools that are consequential outcomes of R&D programmes and initiatives detailed in the previous chapter. These case examples illustrate how the research has led to the transformation of classroom practices. As more schools are adopting or adapting these innovative practices, the substantial impact of research on student learning can be achieved. By innovation, we refer to the enactment of new practices with respect to local contexts, and newness at the time it was introduced. The first project introduced in this chapter is microLESSONS, a NIE-funded project to help teachers design ICT-based instructional materials at the beginning of mp1. The second project, called RCKI using GS, was a product and practice resulted from an NRF-funded IDM for education research initiative. The third case example came from a FutureSchool (Nan Chiau Primary School) that experimented with pedagogies supported by mobile technologies to engage primary school students in making connections to what they learn in the classroom with their daily life experiences. The fourth example came from a school-led eduLab project where teachers designed a three-dimensional virtual learning environment for multidisciplinary environmental education. Finally, action research projects led by school teachers are highlighted: one on a Robotics programme to develop student creative and inventive thinking and another on creating a 1:1 computing environment in a school.
Archive | 2017
Seng Chee Tan; Horn Mun Cheah; Wenli Chen; Doris Choy
This chapter analyses the contemporary developments in Singapore that might have an impact on ICT in education, including technological advances, sociotechnical developments, technology and economy, technology and new perspectives of learning, and technology-related national policies. Based on the current landscape, implications for Singapore education were discussed. In essence, educators need to navigate between the physical space and the cyberspace to leverage their complementary strengths. There is a need to develop many IT specialists that the country needs and to enhance the basic IT competencies of all students to meet the challenge of the future economic model. Physical face-to-face interactions are still essential for preserving the mother tongues and ethnic identities and maintaining social cohesion and state legitimacy in Singapore. Nevertheless, teachers can also harness the abundant resources in the cyberspace to help develop students’ agency in knowledge creation, so that they have the competency and recognize their critical roles in co-creating the future.
Archive | 2017
Seng Chee Tan; Horn Mun Cheah; Wenli Chen; Doris Choy
Starting from Chap. 3, we begin to zoom into the focal point of this book, ICT integration in Singapore’s education system. This chapter explains interconnected policies in Singapore that set the stage and facilitate the effort in bringing ICT into classrooms. Following the multi-perspective analysis of the global situation in Chap. 2, we first examine policies that relate economy, R&D, and education from the 1960s to the present. We then trace the national technology policies in Singapore before describing in more details, the three phases of ICT policies in education that were implemented. The mp1, from 1997 to 2002, focused on establishing a baseline human and technology infrastructure. This allowed the mp2, from 2003 to 2008, to put in place structures and mechanisms to encourage innovative practices that pushed the limits in the use of ICT in T&L. The mp3, from 2009 to 2014, aimed to push the boundary, particular in the assessment of 21st-century skills and, most importantly, put in place processes and structures to scale up good practices through the system. We analyse the rationales behind each Masterplan and identify the impact that each has on the education landscape.