Frontiers in Education (Jun 2023)

EdTech in humanitarian contexts: whose evidence base?

  • Barbara Moser-Mercer,
  • Barbara Moser-Mercer,
  • Kawkab K. AlMousa,
  • Rawan M. Alhaj Hussein,
  • Rawan K. AlSbihe,
  • Ahmad S. AlGasem,
  • Ali A. Hadmoun,
  • Bashar A. Bakkar,
  • Mohammed H. AlQadri,
  • Mohammed M. AlHmoud

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2023.1038476
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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This study reports on the design and development of a methodological toolbox prototype for evaluating EdTech deployed in the contexts of fragility and crisis. The project adopted a bottom-up approach: training EdTech users in participatory action research approaches was followed by a comprehensive mapping of problems in the Azraq refugee camp that might be addressed through the chosen EdTech installed in a local Makerspace. Students as researchers used a developmental evaluation approach to deepen their understanding of evaluation as a concept and as a process and proceeded to match the results of their Azraq camp problem-tree analysis with evaluation questions related to the EdTech tools available in the Makerspace. The study concludes with a proposed methodological toolbox prototype, a set of approaches and processes that include research capacity building in fragile contexts, and user-led evaluation that emphasizes the notion of evaluation as a learning process driven by those designed to benefit from EdTech in fragile contexts.

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