What Is ICT Education and Why
Is It Important ?
Information
and Communications Technologies (ICT) education is basically our society’s
efforts to teach its current and emerging citizens valuable knowledge and
skills around computing and communications devices, software that operates
them, applications that run on them and systems that are built with them.
What are
these things? How do they work? How do you use them productively? How are they
deployed, assembled, managed and maintained to create productive systems? How
they are used in specific business and industry settings? What are the
underlying science and technologies behind them and how might those be developed
to advance ICT fields?
ICT is
complex and quickly changing, and it is confusing for many people. It is so
pervasive in the modern world that everyone has some understanding of it, but
those understandings are often wildly divergent.
There are
many important dimensions to ICT education, including:
·
ICT/Digital Literacy – Today, everyone needs a basic understanding of ICT and how to make
productive use of it, just to be good students, workers and citizens. Teaching
people how to be competent basic users of ICT technologies is an important role
of ICT education, so they will be successful in their academic and work
careers, and so they can efficiently participate in modern technical society.
As part of its study validating U.S. Department of Labor IT Competency model
content in California, MPICT determined with 99% confidence California employer
agreement with the following statements regarding Digital Literacy:
·
“Information
and communication technologies (ICT) competencies are increasingly important
for most of our employers, regardless of role. If there was an agreed-upon
standard for "digital literacy", or ICT competencies expected of all
workers, regardless of workplace role, my organization would value a credential
based on that standard as a way of validating ICT skills for non-ICT workers.”
(70.5% agree or very much agree)
·
“In the 21st
century, an ability to work with information and communication technologies is
becoming as essential to education, life and workplace success as
"reading, writing and arithmetic".” ICT Digital Literacy should be
considered a basic skill by educational systems, something taught to and
assessed for all students. (85.2% agree or very much agree)
·
This study
details 49 competencies for ICT User level knowledge and skills, as an
actionable, teachable and assessable definition of what people need to know and
be able to do to be “digitally literate.”
·
ICT Infrastructure and Support Applied Technologists – Beyond a basic user competency,
our society also needs more knowledgeable and capable technical people to
deploy, manage and maintain ICT equipment, software and systems, so they work
well for users. In all industries, these people manage computer and communications
hardware, software and applications; networked systems; online information
sharing, communication and commerce systems; business processes making use of
these systems; and user support.
·
Specialized Business and Industry Uses of ICT – As enabling technologies, ICT is
used strategically in almost all businesses and industries. Many have developed
specialized systems and uses of ICT, and many have specialized legal and
regulatory requirements; quality control systems; integrations with production
and research equipment and systems; security requirements; and software
applications. For example:
·
Bioscience
industries rely on specialized ICT systems and applications to conduct
research, analyze organic materials, produce biotech products and do required
reporting;
- Financial services industries
rely on ICT to maintain customer records, do business, conduct trades, do
financial reporting, secure proprietary information and comply with
regulations;
- Manufacturing industries use
specialized computer controlled systems and robotics to design, produce
and test products.
- Property management operations
use ICT to network and control heating and cooling, lighting and building
access systems.
- Electric utilities use ICT to
monitor and manage electricity distribution, customer billing and smart
metering systems.
- Telecommunications, cable TV
and other entertainment industries use ICT to store content, manage
customers and deliver their services.
We need to
develop a competent workforce that understands not only relevant technologies,
but also specialized business and industry environments and operations, to meet
these specialized needs.
- ICT Research and Development Scientists – ICT fields themselves are under constant pressure to evolve and improve. We need people who deeply understand the science and technologies underlying ICT and who can work to advance the fields.
In virtually all modern businesses
and industries, and in modern society in general, ICT has key strategic roles.
It is strategically important to develop citizens and workers who can
competently and efficiently operate and add value in these systems and
environments.
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