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Featured researches published by Tom Power.


Open Learning: The Journal of Open and Distance Learning | 2010

Introducing mobile technology for enhancing teaching and learning in Bangladesh: teacher perspectives

M. Mahruf C. Shohel; Tom Power

This paper reviews the themes emerging from Bangladeshi teachers’ experiences of taking part in the initial research and the development stage of a professional development programme they were involved with. The Secondary Teaching and Learning Programme is an information and communications technologies‐enhanced supported open distance learning programme of professional development in English‐language teaching. This paper presents evidence arising from semi‐structured interviews carried out with teachers from a pre‐pilot study for the English in Action project. The teachers participating in this study reflect upon six months’ experience of using professional development materials (course material of audio podcasts enhanced with text and images; videos of classroom practice; audio of classroom language) and classroom resources (audio recordings of text‐book reading passages, songs, poems and stories), all accessed via portable digital media players (iPods).


Professional Development in Education | 2013

The ‘trainer in your pocket’: mobile phones within a teacher continuing professional development program in Bangladesh

Christopher Walsh; Tom Power; Masuda Khatoon; Sudeb Kumar Biswas; Ashok Kumar Paul; Bikash Chandra Sarkar; Malcolm Griffiths

Examples of mobile phones being used with teachers to provide continuing professional development (CPD) in emerging economies at scale are largely absent from the research literature. We outline English in Action’s (EIA) model for providing 80,000 teachers with CPD to improve their communicative language teaching in Bangladesh over nine years. EIA’s CPD program is delivered face to face and supported through open distance learning (ODL). This innovative model of teacher CPD is supported through peer learning and self-study using a variety of print, audio and video resources. Drawing on the success of EIA’s pilot studies, where internal and external evaluation reported significant improvement in teachers’ and students’ English-language competence after one year, the current phase is using low-cost mobile phones, or the ‘trainer in your pocket’ to deliver CPD to 12,500 teachers through 2015. We believe EIA’s teacher CDP model is best suited to assist the project in achieving one of its primary goals: to increase the English-language proficiency of 12 million students, allowing them to access greater social and economic opportunities in the future. We argue EIA’s use of mobile phones for the provision of teacher CPD – at scale – is timely and replicable in both developed and developing contexts.


Curriculum Journal | 2012

English in action: school based teacher development in Bangladesh

Tom Power; Robina Shaheen; Michael Solly; Clare Woodward; Sonia Burton

In the Least Economically Developed Countries (LEDCs), School Based Teacher Development (SBTD) is sometimes advocated as a potential mechanism for improving the classroom practices experienced by millions of children in a complete school system, as quickly as possible. Robust evidence is required for approaches to be implemented with some confidence by Government development agencies, such as the UK Department for International Development (DFID). SBTD has a long history stemming from ideas of school-based curriculum development, which underlay the ideas on teacher-as-researcher, and is typically advocated in the developed world based on a view of the teacher as a professional. How might such notions play out, and to what effect, in LEDC contexts? This article examines the issues at stake in introducing SBTD in LEDCs, by examining: the nature of the evidence for various forms of teacher development, the nature of SBTD in particular and the evidence for its effectiveness. The latter issues will be illustrated through examination of English in Action (EIA, www.eiabd.com), a large-scale SBTD programme for primary and secondary English language (EL) teachers serving government schools across Bangladesh.


Curriculum Journal | 2007

The Classroom in Your Pocket

Tom Power; Rhodri Thomas

Research exploring the ways in which information communication technologies (ICTs) could improve access to, and the quality of, teacher education in the global south (Leach et al., 2006) showed that when teachers were given sustained training, support and access to laptop and handheld computers, they found the handheld and laptop computers equally useful, both as tools for their own professional development and as tools for supporting classroom practices. Those who expressed a preference for one device over the other identified the handheld computer as the best tool for supporting teacher professional development and practice, particularly in rural communities. This article reports the findings of a recent one-year project which built on the previous research, but which focused solely on the potential of handheld computers for teacher professional development. Many studies have investigated the use of handheld computers in classroom settings but most of these focus on pupil learning (e.g. Fung et al., 1998; Yarnall et al., 2003). There is not yet a substantial body of literature on the potential of handhelds for teacher education, although Soloway (2002) argues that handhelds provide an opportunity for making major changes in educational settings. In this study, the teachers themselves used the analytical framework for teacher professional knowledge developed by Banks et al. (1999) to consider their own experiences with the handheld computers. This study finds that handheld digital tools offer a number of pedagogic and pragmatic advantages over laptop or desktop computers for teachers, especially in rural communities. However, further technical development is required fully to orient the devices to classroom practices (as opposed to the ‘office’ or ‘business’ orientation).


Transforming Government: People, Process and Policy | 2012

Towards a new architecture for teacher professional development in South Sudan

Tom Power

Purpose – Mobile phone adoption and diffusion in low economic development countries (LEDCs) may provide for greater information access using open educational resources to support large‐scale teacher education programmes. The purpose of this paper is to explore this.Design/methodology/approach – Drawing on evaluations of the current basic services provision in South Sudan and the identified needs for improving English language teaching, this conceptual paper presents an analysis of the nature and extent of teacher training needs in South Sudan, and the capacity of the current system to deliver against those needs.Findings – The education system in South Sudan is ranked among the lowest in the world for primary and secondary enrollment. South Sudan is faced with the almost impossible task of tripling its teacher work force, but the quantity and quality of training required cannot be delivered through existing teacher training institutes.Research limitations/implications – The immediate post‐conflict situati...


Archive | 2006

DEEP IMPACT: an investigation of the use of information and communication technologies for teacher education in the global south: Researching the issues

Jenny Leach; Atef Ahmed; Shumi Makalima; Tom Power


European Journal of Teacher Education | 2004

Deep impact: a study of the use of hand-held computers for teacher professional development in primary schools in the Global South

Jenny Leach; Rakhee Patel; Alexis Peters; Tom Power; Atef Ahmed; Shumi Makalima


Archive | 2010

Mobile technologies for (English) language learning: An exploration in the context of Bangladesh

Tom Power; Prithvi Shrestha


Archive | 2002

Building teachers' professional knowledge through ICT: experience and analysis across the digital divide

Jenny Leach; Bob Moon; Tom Power


Presented to the mLearn 2005 Conference, Cape Town, South Africa, 26 October 2005 | 2005

4D Technologies: appropriating handheld computers to serve the needs of teachers and learners in rural African settings

Jennifer Leach; Tom Power; Rhodri Thomas; Xolisa Fadani; Andile Mbebe

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