A substantial amount of money is spent on technology by schools,
families and policymakers with the hope of improving educational
outcomes. This paper explores the theoretical and empirical literature
on the impacts of technology on educational outcomes.
The literature
focuses on two primary contexts in which technology may be used for
educational purposes: i) classroom use in schools, and ii) home use by
students. Theoretically, ICT investment and CAI use by schools and the
use of computers at home have ambiguous implications for educational
achievement: expenditures devoted to technology necessarily offset
inputs that may be more or less efficient, and time allocated to using
technology may displace traditional classroom instruction and
educational activities at home.
However, much of the evidence in the
schooling literature is based on interventions that provide supplemental
funding for technology or additional class time, and thus favor finding
positive effects. Nonetheless, studies of ICT and CAI in schools
produce mixed evidence with a pattern of null results. Notable
exceptions to this pattern occur in studies of developing countries and
CAI interventions that target math rather than language.
In the context
of home use, early studies based on multivariate and instrumental
variables approaches tend to find large positive (and in a few cases
negative) effects while recent studies based on randomized control
experiments tend to find small or null effects. Early research focused
on developed countries while more recently several experiments have been
conducted in developing countries.
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