Resource 9: Common Challenges in ICT Integration

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ICT for Progressive Pedagogies — Challenges & Best Practices (Tanzania)

ICT can help us move from chalk-and-talk to student-centred learning (inquiry, collaboration, creation, problem-solving). In many Tanzanian schools the reality includes few devices and unstable internet — but practical strategies still make progressive teaching possible.

Goal: Use ICT to help learners think, discuss, create and apply knowledge — not just watch or copy.

Key Challenges in Tanzanian Context

  • Limited devices & power: Few or old computers; one phone per class; unreliable electricity.
  • Poor/expensive internet: Connection only in admin blocks or dropping mid-lesson; data costs limit access.
  • Digital literacy gaps: Comfort with basic tools, but limited experience in interactive or collaborative ICT teaching.
  • Low pedagogical confidence: ICT used for slides, not for inquiry/group work; “digital” but still didactic.
  • Weak institutional support: No ICT policy, training plan, maintenance budget, or incentives for innovation.

Best Practices (Make ICT Serve Learning)

A) Start simple & scaffold up

  • Introduce one new tool at a time (e.g., WhatsApp voice notes → Google Slides → H5P checks).
  • Plan short, clear tasks that show visible learner thinking.

B) Design for one device per group

  • Padlet idea wall, Google Docs co-writing, quick Kahoot/Mentimeter checks.
  • Rotate roles: leader, researcher, recorder, presenter, timekeeper.

C) Use offline/low-data methods

  • Download videos in advance; share by Bluetooth/flash drive.
  • Use Moodle offline/Kolibri; print QR-linked tasks as backup.

D) Train for pedagogy (not just buttons)

  • In PLCs/peer mentoring ask: “How does this tool help learners think, discuss, solve, create?”
  • Co-plan one progressive task per week; review and refine together.

E) Secure leadership & policy support

  • Simple policy: at least one digital, student-produced activity per term per subject.
  • Budget for maintenance/data; recognise innovative teachers.
Quick planning template (tomorrow):
  1. Before class: Share a 3–5 min video/reading (WhatsApp/Classroom) + 2 H5P checks.
  2. In class (groups, one phone): Investigate a local problem; post two examples to Padlet/Slides; prepare a 1-minute share-out.
  3. End: Run a 3-question Kahoot/Mentimeter; pairs justify answers.

Simple Checklist

Question Yes/No
Does the task make learners do something (investigate, create, discuss)?
Can it run with one device per group?
Is there an offline/low-data fallback?
Will I capture evidence (Padlet posts, Docs, quiz results)?
What will I improve next time (based on student feedback)?

Takeaway: The best ICT is the one your learners can access that clearly supports your outcome and gets students inquiring, collaborating, creating and solving — even with one phone per group.

Last modified: Friday, 12 December 2025, 1:05 PM