Education

Experts call for quality assurance of edtech for schools and students

A new report highlights an urgent need to build a national quality assurance process for digitally enabled teaching and learning resources

<p>The Australian edtech sector generates annual revenue of &dollar;3&period;6 billion as AI and learning technology take hold in classrooms&period; At the same time learning outcomes for Australian students are stagnant and equity gaps continue to grow&period; To drive change&comma; edtech – including AI-enabled applications – need to be well designed and effectively used&comma; but in a rapidly growing sea of applications&comma; it is almost impossible to know when that’s the case&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;school-news&period;com&period;au&sol;latest-print-issue&sol;" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noopener"><strong>Read the latest print edition of <em>School News<&sol;em> HERE<&sol;strong><&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>A new report&comma; released by the Chair of the Australian Network for Quality Digital Education&comma; calls for policymakers to urgently build a national quality assurance process for digitally enabled teaching and learning resources &lpar;&OpenCurlyQuote;edtech’&rpar;&comma; with clear criteria and a robust and transparent assessment process&comma; to ensure Australian students can benefit from the highest quality learning tools and curriculum resources&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Authored by Network Chair Professor Leslie Loble AM and Director of Edtech and Education Policy Dr Kelly Stephens&comma; the paper advocates for criteria that&comma; at minimum&comma; ensure edtech is backed by evidence and provides support for quality teacher use&comma; is true to the curriculum&comma; is inclusive of all students&comma; and ensures safe and ethical use of data&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Professor Loble – who is former chair of the Australian Education Ministerial Council’s Schooling Policy Group&comma; former Deputy Secretary in the NSW Department of Education and author of a <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;link&period;mediaoutreach&period;meltwater&period;com&sol;ls&sol;click&quest;upn&equals;u001&period;64fx9fOj7FUhPQ8r3NZE42NhJu-2BYFn0DeZ3KEWxpCCYN9d5tCo197tZTUCS6ccJX8q1-2FGzy-2BXlPPf9agXpldbxC9PSfBgxjNqf6Lx4AC0rFeSGRRU0J5vxMDd0urNXJwTWq8PgggGiXnfUpgZSXWyKZFZYfqJjf1XIHeQPmVmKygOk-2Bw6FqPYpM2dEbEU5kcdQb-2FO0V9pkCLJNpKm3cse0LwgAQ5gS7ymfHanHII3Ig-3DQeV&lowbar;&lowbar;Zo92y-2F33LDAoGBOX9YeuMxzNg5Ms54v7YDS7RSCBpRoY1oaj-2BgRTetBoFaNkik-2ByprLZIMqu356ZbGeiNBe4iJymgSmG-2Bt7N3DTqI2ftVz20Z3vE-2FDFHZnteWekpKrT1ACnByArXbG2xOTKOb4-2FBSMKIjlda9KLcG7sFhJxf67LZ-2Fik-2BqPkWhjrhdiQYPWPhoVJE6FMPJHK3ZE08bAACfk-2ByrsDkuvP6yQUC0wkSVmJPbSEO0T8o2t1g7Zet9NklYdGPVBeP8-2B2pI9LmAMvo8V0RejCA3D-2BuoMGN2YL7GWgX5Jef2JVPeNFS-2BFhnCVmySgk8iINTgG8N-2B06qHY0g7SRChblcmBt4xS043t4KzzIDk9BRdREujHxN3Vr7nWFRM2fV-2BdK5yuZ0iTE9LsTqGg-3D-3D" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noopener noreferrer" data-auth&equals;"NotApplicable" data-linkindex&equals;"1" data-ogsc&equals;"rgb&lpar;5&comma; 99&comma; 193&rpar;">report<&sol;a> highlighting the potential for high-quality AI and edtech to help tackle Australia’s learning divide – said digital resources that support all students to access and succeed in curriculum-aligned learning should be the priority for quality assurance&comma; with teachers playing a central role to help develop criteria and assess resources&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<blockquote>&NewLine;<p>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Teachers and parents are overwhelmed for choice from a booming edtech market&comma; with 500&comma;000 learning apps available online and more marketed directly to schools&comma; but there’s no independent&comma; comprehensive source of information about the quality of these resources in Australia&comma;” said Professor Loble&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;blockquote>&NewLine;<p>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Edtech decision makers currently select and implement technologies with far too little information about what is likely to work in their schools&period; We are consequently spending untold amounts of money – in schools&comma; and at home – on edtech that may be overused&comma; underused&comma; or ineffectively used&period; We know for certain it is inequitably used&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;The lack of clearly articulated quality expectations creates a significant risk that our students and schools may fail to benefit from the increased use of edtech&period; Additionally&comma; we still lack system-wide regulatory standards and controls to prevent the tracking and scraping of children’s data from edtech platforms&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Australia is falling behind other jurisdictions in implementing quality assurance processes in response to the growing reliance on edtech&period; Ensuring that Australian students are using the best evidence-backed digital resources&comma; with strong safety and quality criteria in place&comma; should be a priority for policymakers&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Sarah Davies AM – CEO of the Alannah and Madeline Foundation and advocate for children’s rights online – said&colon; &&num;8220&semi;<span data-ogsc&equals;"black">Children&&num;8217&semi;s data privacy and security must be the foundation of all quality edtech and cannot be left to individuals to assure&period; We know that the most vulnerable children in our community are also the most vulnerable online&period;&&num;8221&semi;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<figure id&equals;"attachment&lowbar;27899" aria-describedby&equals;"caption-attachment-27899" style&equals;"width&colon; 600px" class&equals;"wp-caption aligncenter"><img class&equals;" wp-image-27899" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;school-news&period;com&period;au&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2024&sol;07&sol;AdobeStock&lowbar;133685158-1024x683&period;jpeg" alt&equals;"edtech VR" width&equals;"600" height&equals;"400" &sol;><figcaption id&equals;"caption-attachment-27899" class&equals;"wp-caption-text">© contrastwerkstatt&comma; Adobe Stock<&sol;figcaption><&sol;figure>&NewLine;<p>Danny Pikler – CEO and Co-founder of Stile&comma; an online Science curriculum platform – said&colon; &&num;8220&semi;The timing is ripe for Australia to take a stand on quality&comma; but the window is narrow&period; Cards played one way and Australia becomes an OECD leader in high quality instructional materials&comma; in turn improving nationwide student outcomes and boosting teacher wellbeing&period; Cards played another&comma; and Australian companies start investing into overseas markets where quality is defined&comma; valued and funded&period;&&num;8221&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>John Bush – Head of Young People at the Paul Ramsay Foundation – said&colon; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;We know that many Australian children who experience disadvantage are excluded in the digital world too&period; Right now&comma; there’s a real opportunity for AI-based edtech to be a bridge to greater digital inclusion but also a real risk that AI will exacerbate a digital divide&period; To seize the opportunity&comma; it’s crucial that we have quality assurance system that embeds digital inclusion in the design and use of AI-based edtech&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;link&period;mediaoutreach&period;meltwater&period;com&sol;ls&sol;click&quest;upn&equals;u001&period;64fx9fOj7FUhPQ8r3NZE42NhJu-2BYFn0DeZ3KEWxpCCYN9d5tCo197tZTUCS6ccJX8q1-2FGzy-2BXlPPf9agXpldbxC9PSfBgxjNqf6Lx4AC0rFeSGRRU0J5vxMDd0urNXJwTWq8PgggGiXnfUpgZSXWyJ49tS3zm-2FN1lVXDvP-2FfHMyvAnGWbSj78uKHapBY-2FVCK-2Fz8Fqxpwt7a4QZ0Zds-2F8WiD7vV4bGoC2c2qeNKz0ORw-3DJzJ8&lowbar;Zo92y-2F33LDAoGBOX9YeuMxzNg5Ms54v7YDS7RSCBpRoY1oaj-2BgRTetBoFaNkik-2ByprLZIMqu356ZbGeiNBe4iJymgSmG-2Bt7N3DTqI2ftVz20Z3vE-2FDFHZnteWekpKrT1ACnByArXbG2xOTKOb4-2FBSMKIjlda9KLcG7sFhJxf67LZ-2Fik-2BqPkWhjrhdiQYPWPhoVJE6FMPJHK3ZE08bAACfk-2ByrsDkuvP6yQUC0wkSVmJ3cZEuYElDITqyJxzw56bfXlNob-2FFGPCDnDvWacPoQSP6vfLpCcHo2RF6PszjRsL05qB1WBpt4qyZDSPDA4J4v-2FwTgP2rwWl2jfGXqTtjNl3i8m6T0k1QYqeXqqyNbtUHsBHJ9fv7AsxZfEv6roMiWGNieWxatwC9TN-2Fs-2BVAN3-2FQ-3D-3D" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noopener noreferrer" data-auth&equals;"NotApplicable" data-linkindex&equals;"2" data-ogsc&equals;"rgb&lpar;5&comma; 99&comma; 193&rpar;">Network<&sol;a> brings together leaders from across education&comma; industry&comma; social purpose and philanthropic organisations&comma; government and research&comma; in the common purpose of ensuring that all Australian students benefit from the best educational technology &lpar;edtech&rpar;&comma; and the benefits of edtech are leveraged to tackle the persistent learning divide&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Network is being convened with inaugural funding from the Paul Ramsay Foundation and sponsored by Amy Persson&comma; Interim Pro Vice-Chancellor &lpar;Social Justice and Inclusion&rpar; at the University of Technology Sydney&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

Explore our latest issue...
School News

School News is not affiliated with any government agency, body or political party. We are an independently owned, family-operated magazine.

Recent Posts

Are you teaching out of field? Your input is needed

A study investigating the realities of out-of-field teachers is seeking participants for groundbreaking research.

7 days ago

New resources to support media literacy teaching

The resources are designed to support teachers to make sure all students are engaged in…

7 days ago

Understanding tic disorders: What every school should know

Tic disorders are far more common than many people realise, and are often misrepresented in…

7 days ago

The modern library: More than a book storeroom

The school library has long been a place of discovery, reflection, and learning. But as…

7 days ago

Build a strong school community to prevent bullying

Is your school an inclusive community that empowers students to recognise bullying and to stand…

7 days ago

Government school enrolments at 10-year low

Performance indicators for the education and VET sectors have just been released with some encouraging…

2 weeks ago

This website uses cookies.