Therese Keane
Swinburne University of Technology
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Featured researches published by Therese Keane.
Education and Information Technologies | 2016
Therese Keane; William F. Keane; Aaron S. Blicblau
Educators, government bodies and employers have acknowledged the need for modern learners to acquire 21st century skills using information and communication technologies, to personalise student learning. Students need broader skills than the 3Rs (reading, writing and arithmetic) to operate in the 21st century. These broader skills known as the 4Cs include: creativity, communication, collaboration and critical thinking. The use of information and communication technologies is crucial in developing the 4Cs in conjunction with understanding how learning takes place. However, simply using technology does not guarantee that deep learning will occur. The use of technology needs to align and adapt with our knowledge of learning to be able to operate in a transformative space. This paper is designed to link the understandings of deep learning, 21st century skills and appropriate use of information and communication technologies to provide direction to educators who wish to lead in a technological environment of change.
Education and Information Technologies | 2017
Therese Keane; William F. Keane
This longitudinal study explores one secondary school’s approach towards implementing a one computer to one student (1:1) program, which commenced in 2011. Prior to 2011, the school was not very technologically advanced, mainly due to financial constraints which impacted on infrastructure, procurement of hardware and software, the availability of computers to students and learning and teaching. This study considers the perceptions of student and teachers about the integration of the 1:1 program across the School. A mixed methodology was employed comprising qualitative interview data and questionnaires to provide quantitative responses. This enabled an exploration of the effect of the 1:1 program as reported by teachers and the students themselves, as well as the examination of a range of related issues, such as the use of the devices, as well as issues about the implementation of the program. The findings are presented in a thematic style and provide insight into how the 1:1 program was deployed each year through the lens of students and teachers. The paper concludes with recommendations for the successful implementation of a 1:1 program.
IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology: Reflections on the History of Computers in Education: Early Use of Computers and Teaching about Computing in Schools / A. Tatnall and B. Davey (eds.) | 2014
Therese Keane
This chapter is a reflection on the use of computers in the author’s time as a secondary school student, and then subsequently five years later as a qualified teacher of Information Technology. Despite the uneven teaching of computing in the 1980s low student enrolments, and the marginalization of the subject, computing flourished in the 1990s. With ever increasing enrolments for computing subjects, and a strong demand to access the computer room, resources were stretched and tensions were high. Some of the early problems that surfaced with the introduction of computing have been resolved, whilst others continue to be a challenge.
annual conference on computers | 2017
Therese Keane; Monica Williams; Christina Chalmers; Marie Boden
Through the use of humanoid robots, a rural school in South Australia has included both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people in embedding the “sleeping” language of the traditional owners of the land (the Narungga people) into the classroom. Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal students worked with virtual and real humanoid robots to develop in parallel both their programming skills and their understanding of the Narungga language and culture. This research is part of a larger three-year study investigating the impact of humanoid robots on students’ learning and engagement and draws on questionnaires, interviews and journals from the educators. The study demonstrated how pride and interest in Aboriginal culture can be partially reclaimed using these inclusive and adaptive technologies. Simultaneously, students and educators were learning two languages; the coding language required to program the robot and the Narungga language.
Australian Educational Computing | 2013
Therese Keane; Catherine Lang; Chris J. Pilgrim
Australian Educational Computing | 2015
Jason Zagami; Marie Boden; Therese Keane; Bronwyn Moreton; Karsten Schulz
Future challenges, sustainable futures, the 29th Annual Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education Conference (ascilite 2012), Wellington, New Zealand, 25-28 November 2012 / M. Brown, M. Hartnett and T. Stewart (eds.) | 2012
Therese Keane; Aaron S. Blicblau
Archive | 2016
Jason Zagami; Marie Boden; Therese Keane; Bronwyn Moreton; Karsten Schulz
annual conference on computers | 2013
Therese Keane; William F. Keane; Aaron S. Blicblau
Education and Information Technologies | 2018
Therese Keane; William F. Keane