Your search
In authors or contributors
Literature reviews of educational technology research in low and middle-income countries: an audit of the field
Resource type
Report
Authors/contributors
- Haßler, Björn (Author)
- Adam, Taskeen (Author)
- Brugha, Meaghan (Author)
- Damani, Kalifa (Author)
- Allier-Gagneur, Zoe (Author)
- Hennessy, Sara (Author)
- Hollow, David (Author)
- Jordan, Katy (Author)
- Martin, Kevin (Author)
- Murphy, Mary (Author)
- Walker, Hannah (Author)
Title
Literature reviews of educational technology research in low and middle-income countries: an audit of the field
Abstract
One of the overall objectives of the EdTech Hub is to conduct a series of literature reviews on the state of educational technology in primary and secondary school settings within low and middle-income countries (LMICs). Given the variety of approaches which
can be considered as ‘educational technology’ and the range of settings which are LMICs, the scale of the task presents an initial challenge. Furthermore, it would be valuable to design the initial literature search in such a way that would subsequently support
detailed, systematic reviews on particular themes or topics depending upon trends within the body of literature.
In order to learn from existing related studies and inform the practical direction of the literature review, a collection of documents was examined and analysed. The collection included seven methodological documents about conducting systematic reviews, and 15
recent systematic reviews, which addressed topics related to the focus of the Hub (including a range of EdTech-related topics or education for development, for example).
In this report we have two objectives :
1. Summarise methodologies for systematic literature reviews in the field of educational
technology in LMICs.
2. Provide specific methodological recommendations on conducting a systematic
literature review of the state of research on educational technology in LMICs.
To investigate systematic literature reviews in the field of interest (Objective 1), insights were drawn from an analysis of the sample of documents. The papers selected for inclusion were chosen either because they were existing literature reviews relevant to our theme of EdTech in LMICs, or because they were analyses of specific literature review methodologies. The papers were mapped onto a framework according to their methodological stance, approaches to data gathering, and data analysis.
This paper also discusses the implications of the analysis in relation to the work of the EdTech Hub, and how to translate the findings of the analysis into practical considerations for addressing the Hub’s research questions through a systematic literature review (Objective 2). As such, this report also represents a case study in planning a literature review in this context, which may be a useful resource for others intending to undertake similar reviews in the future.
Report Number
2
Report Type
EdTech Hub Working Paper
Place
Cambridge and London, UK
Institution
EdTech Hub
Date
18/12/2019
Short Title
Literature reviews of educational technology research in low and middle-income countries
Rights
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Extra
Citation
Haßler, B., Adam, T., Brugha, M., Damani, K., Allier-Gagneur, Z., Hennessy, S., Hollow, D., Jordan, K., Martin, K., Murphy, M., & Walker, H. (2019). Literature reviews of educational technology research in low and middle-income countries: an audit of the field (EdTech Hub Working Paper No. 2). EdTech Hub. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3523942
Our programmes
Organisations, collaborators and clients
Publication type
Location
Link to this record