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Featured researches published by Vinesh Chandra.


British Journal of Educational Technology | 2008

The methodological nettle: ICT and student achievement

Vinesh Chandra; Margaret Lloyd

A major challenge for researchers and educators has been to discern the effect of ICTuseonstudentlearningoutcomes.Thispapermapstheachievementsin Year 10 Science of two cohorts of students over two years where students in the first year studied in a traditional environment while students in the second took part in a blended or e-learning environment. Using both quantitative and qualitative methods, the authors have shown that ICT, through an e-learning intervention, did improve student performance in terms of test scores. They have also shown that this improvement was not global with the results for previously high-performing female students tending to fall while the results for lower-achieving boys rose. There was also a seeming mismatch between some students’affectiveresponsestothenewenvironmentandtheirtestscores.This study shows the complexity of ICT-mediated environments through its identification and description of three core issues which beset the credibility of research in ICT in education.These are (1) ICT as an agent of learning, (b) site specificity, and (c) global improvement.


Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy | 2011

Microblogging as a Literacy Practice for Educational Communities.

Kathy A. Mills; Vinesh Chandra

Microblogging is an emergent adolescent and adult literacy practice that has become popularized through platforms such as Twitter, Plurk and Jaiku, in the rise of Web 2.0 – “the social web”. Yet the potentials of microblogging for literacy learning in educational contexts is currently underexplored in the research and literature. This article draws on new research with 150 adolescent and adult participants in school and university contexts, which was made possible through cross-disciplinary collaboration between specialists English and Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) educators. Strategies are provided for teachers to establish their own microblogging networks, with suggested activities to enhance the literacy learning of adolescents in educational contexts.


Technology, Pedagogy and Education | 2015

Transforming the core business of teaching and learning in classrooms through ICT

Vinesh Chandra; Kathy A. Mills

Information and Communication Technology (ICT) has become an integral part of societies across the globe. This study demonstrates how successful technology integration by 10 experienced teachers in an Australian high school was dependent on teacher-driven change and innovation that influenced the core business of teaching and learning. The teachers were subject specialists across a range of disciplines, engaging their Year Eight students (aged 12–14 years) in the Technology Rich Classrooms programme. Two classrooms were renovated to accommodate the newly acquired computer hardware. The first classroom adopted a one-to-one desktop model with all the computers with Internet access arranged in a front-facing pattern. The second classroom had computers arranged in small groups. The students also used Blackboard to access learning materials after school hours. Qualitative data were gathered from teachers mainly through structured and unstructured interviews and a range of other approaches to ascertain their perceptions of the new initiative. This investigation showed that ICT was impacting positively on the core business of teaching and learning. Through the support of the school leadership team, the built environment was enabling teachers to use ICT. This influenced their pedagogical approaches and the types of learning activities they designed and implemented. As a consequence, teachers felt that students were motivated and benefited through this experience.


International Journal of Pedagogies and Learning | 2012

ICT driven pedagogies and its impact on learning outcomes in high school mathematics

Vinesh Chandra; Jo Briskey

Abstract ICT (information and communication technology) creates numerous opportunities for teachers to re-think their pedagogies. In subjects like mathematics which draws upon abstract concepts, ICT creates such an opportunity. Instead of a mimetic pedagogical approach, suitably designed activities with ICT can enable learners to engage more proactively with their learning. In this quasi-experimental designed study, ICT was used in teaching mathematics to a group of first year high school students (N = 25) in Australia. The control group was taught predominantly through traditional pedagogies (N = 22). Most of the variables that had previously impacted on the design of such studies were suitably controlled in this year-long investigation. Quantitative and qualitative results showed that students who were taught by ICT driven pedagogies benefitted from the experience. Pre- and post-test means showed that there was a difference between the treatment and control groups. Of greater significance was that the students (in the treatment group) believed that the technology enabled them to engage more with their learning.


Journal of Education for Teaching | 2014

Retooling Asian-Pacific Teachers to Promote Creativity, Innovation and Problem Solving in Science Classrooms

Kar-Tin Lee; Christina Chalmers; Vinesh Chandra; Andy Yeh; Rod Nason

This paper reports on a Professional Learning Programme undertaken by primary school teachers in China that aimed to facilitate the development of ‘adaptive expertise’ in using technology to facilitate innovative science teaching and learning such as that envisaged by the Chinese Ministry of Education’s (2010–2020) education reforms. The study found that the participants made substantial progress towards the development of adaptive expertise manifested not only by advances in the participants’ repertoires of pedagogical content knowledge but also in changes to their levels of confidence and identities as teachers. By the end of the programme, the participants had coalesced into a professional learning community that readily engaged in the sharing, peer review, reuse and adaption, and collaborative design of innovative science learning and assessment activities. The findings from the study indicate that those engaged in the development of Professional Learning Programmes in Asia-Pacific nations need to take cognizance of certain cultural factors and traditions idiosyncratic to the educational systems. This is reflected in the amended set of principles to inform the design and implementation of professional learning programmes presented in the concluding sections of the paper.


Faculty of Education | 2014

Implementing ICT in Schools in a Developing Country: A Fijian Experience

Vinesh Chandra; Ramila Chandra; David Nutchey

Significant advances have been made towards the United Nations Millennium Development Goals on universal education. While there has been an increase in the number of children who now attend primary school, the quality of education remains an issue in many countries. Knowledge and the ability to use ICT are considered to be mandatory for citizens of this century. Information and Communication Technology (ICT) is becoming increasingly more common in classrooms in developed countries. However, ICT use is often beyond the reach of many school communities in developing countries. While supporting these developing countries through donations of technology is a start, there is an equal if not a greater need to build teacher capacity so that the resources are effective in classrooms. The Share, Engage and Educate (SEE) project is about creating educational opportunities for learners in developing countries using ICT. Through the efforts of volunteers, the project provides technological resources to schools and engages teachers in activities that develop their capacity. The SEE project has adopted a four-phase model for ICT integration: objectives, implementation, feedback, and reflection. This chapter reports upon the project’s ongoing implementation phase in Fiji, including the approach taken to build teacher capacity and the identification of factors which have impacted upon the project’s success.


School of Teacher Education & Leadership; Faculty of Education | 2018

Service Learning in a Virtual Classroom

Donna Tangen; Vinesh Chandra; Deborah J. Henderson

This project connected Australian preservice teachers with Malaysian and Fijian partners through engagement in a virtual classroom. The purpose of the virtual classroom was to assist Australian preservice teachers in developing intercultural awareness from a global perspective by co-creating curriculum artefacts with Malaysian and Fijian partners. Participants connected via Edmodo, Facebook, Skype, and e-mail although most connections were conducted via Facebook, as this was the preservice teachers’ most common day-to-day communication format. Inductive analysis of qualitative data revealed that the Australian preservice teachers were challenged to work online with people they did not know and who represented a culture they knew little about. Nevertheless, these preservice teachers also described that working with their international partners caused them to look inward to discover their “deep-seated” beliefs and biases about other cultures where at times they felt they “knew it all” whilst at other times they felt that they “knew nothing at all.” Data from the current study indicate there is value in promoting intercultural educational exchanges in a virtual classroom.


Faculty of Education | 2017

Demonstration of Twenty-First Century Skills Through an ICT Teaching Problem: Experiences of Pre-service Teachers in a Fijian Classroom

Vinesh Chandra; Donna Tangen

University students can become more proactive in dealing with some of the issues associated with globalization. Through this experience, they can demonstrate twenty-first century skills, which include critical and creative thinking, collaboration, and communication (the “4Cs”). This chapter focuses on pre-service teachers (N = 7) who provided their service to a school on a remote island in Fiji. The students collaborated in cross-faculty teams to design and deliver classroom activities (based on the local curriculum) that showcased the use of information and communication technology (ICT). Data gathered through participant observations and their journals showed evidence of the pre-service teachers applying their disciplinary knowledge and the 4Cs to solve seen and unseen problems. In the process, they grappled with some of the complexities of globalization.


Faculty of Education | 2017

Teacher educators’ critical reflection on becoming and belonging to a community of practice

Lenore Adie; Amanda Mergler; Jennifer H. Alford; Vinesh Chandra; Erika Hepple

Establishing communities of practice is a tenuous process fraught with a multiplicity of experiences and artefacts that come together and either strengthen or hinder the practice. In this chapter a diverse group of teacher educators reflect on their experience of being brought together to form a community of practice in the scholarship of teaching. Their task was to collaboratively consider and problem solve some of the key issues currently impacting on teacher education, and more broadly on higher education. How the group negotiated shared meaning and purpose is a focus of the chapter. There were many challenges and issues that the group needed to collaboratively and individually solve before progressing towards shared meaning. The experiences of the assigned leaders of this group are also considered, yet it is the evolving understanding of leadership through collaboration that is of greater importance. The interplay of the experiences of all group members along with the artefacts and practices that reify the group’s purpose are considered. We explore how the group members began to understand how to work collaboratively across the boundaries of their disciplines, and how reflecting on their learning and participation in this group enabled them to work through issues that were constraining their progress.


Learning Environments Research | 2009

Students' Perceptions of a Blended Web-Based Learning Environment

Vinesh Chandra; Darrell Fisher

Collaboration


Dive into the Vinesh Chandra's collaboration.

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Christina Chalmers

Queensland University of Technology

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Andy Yeh

Queensland University of Technology

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David Nutchey

Queensland University of Technology

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Kar-Tin Lee

Queensland University of Technology

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Kathy A. Mills

Queensland University of Technology

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James J. Watters

Queensland University of Technology

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Ji Yong Park

Queensland University of Technology

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Margaret Lloyd

Queensland University of Technology

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Peter B. Hudson

Queensland University of Technology

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