Digital Technologies’ potential has brought new challenges to teachers, making it essential to acquire digital competences that will allow them to effectively use those technologies. The aim of this research is to assess the Portuguese high school teachers’ digital competence level. The quantitative methodology used emphasises the teachers’ perception of their digital competences in three focal dimensions: teachers’ professional and pedagogic competences and learners’ competences. The findings show that teachers’ digital competence level is moderate; the dimensions with the lowest values are “teachers’ pedagogic competences” and “learners’ competences”. Subdimensions Assessment, Empowering Learners and Facilitating Learners’ Digital Competence are the weakest.
El potencial de las tecnologías digitales ha traído nuevos desafíos para los profesores, haciendo esencial el adquirir competencias digitales que les permitan usar efectivamente esas tecnologías. El propósito de esta investigación es evaluar el nivel de competencia digital de los profesores de portugués de secundaria. La metodología cuantitativa usada enfatiza la percepción de los profesores sobre sus competencias digitales en tres dimensiones focales: competencias profesional y pedagógica de los profesores y competencias de los aprendices. Los hallazgos muestran que el nivel de competencia digital de los profesores es moderado; las dimensiones con los valores más bajos son “competencias pedagógicas de los profesores” y “competencias de los aprendices”.
The integration of digital technologies into the education system and, specifically, the development of digital learning ecosystems, enables the fulfilment of all the advantages associated with educational technologies, understood by different authors as motivating and promoters of diversified, hybrid, fertile and dynamic learning environments, which became increasingly complete (
The possibilities generated by technologies have completely changed the way people live, how people relate to knowledge and how it is achieved. In this context, it is increasingly difficult to distinguish between what is real and what is virtual, or what is human, machine or nature (
It is then necessary to rethink the way the school is perceived and how to define what should be the “best” pedagogy nowadays.
Even though it is well known, for most people, that there is no longer a way to avoid letting technology into the school, many teachers either still try to avoid it or lack the abilities to make a meaningful use of it. Nevertheless, it is present in the daily routines of all students, making it an integral part of their lives. But, as
However, for this change to occur, both teachers and students must learn how to use digital technology in education in such a way that it truly creates innovative and sustainable scenarios, and where learning environments provide an effective improvement of the educational process. For this, teachers and students need to adapt to new times and learn to use digital technologies in an educational context (
In addition, teaching and learning in this digital society is becoming an increasingly motivating yet demanding challenge, to which a training model, such as the theoretical framework of Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPACK) (
In fact, it is increasingly relevant to understand how to use digital technology positively and, above all, to know when and how its use produces a result that truly contributes to an improvement in the teaching and learning process. Therefore, if this same technology can support education and contribute to creating more efficient learning environments, then it is necessary to be digitally fluent (
However, there are hardly any studies that focus on the difference between knowing how to use digital technologies at school and actually being fluent at it. But at the end of the last century, more specifically in 1999, the US National Research Council was already pointing to the difference between someone who can work with technological tools, that is, someone who is digital or technologically literate, and someone who
understand[s] information technology broadly enough to be able to apply it productively at work and in their everyday lives, to recognize when information technology would assist or impede the achievement of a goal, and to continually adapt to the changes in and advancement of information technology (
In the same text, three different types of knowledge are identified that characterise what its authors call FITness (fluency with information technology): Intellectual capacities to use the technologies in different complex and sustainable environments, and that fully articulate with the daily life of the citizen; concepts of the very basis from which information technologies are developed, which the authors argue are understood through practice and not merely by reading documents; skills always updated, in the sense that the user can use different technological tools and can adapt to their evolution and even to the emergence of new tools (
At this point, it is also important to know how to manage the enormous flow of information that can be accessed, knowing how to distinguish the essential from the accessory, or as
Related to how teachers can interact with different digital tools,
reciprocal relationship between actual use and digital fluency implies a potential virtuous circle to improve one’s digital fluency. Alternatively, this could also imply a vicious circle, which deepens the digital divide (
Research on the importance of digital fluency exists (
Thus, which digital competences need to be further developed by Portuguese high school teachers? Providing and answer to this research question, through a questionnaire prepared by the EU Science Hub, and consequently assessing digital competence levels of Portuguese high school teachers is the aim of this research. Based on the findings, it should be possible to then design specific training, so that teachers feel confident about using digital technologies not only in collaboration with their peers, but especially with their students.
The research took place in two Portuguese high schools, one in Miranda do Corvo and another one in Sines, both with demographics that matched their geographical areas. The instrument used was one created by the EU Science Hub Department (
The sample was retrieved from two teacher-training sessions, organized by teacher-training centres. Teachers present at these sessions were asked to, anonymously, answer the instrument, which was done by 132 high school teachers.
Of the answers obtained, only 127 were analysed, since five questionnaires were not completely filled in. Among the 127 participants, 17 are male and 110 are female. No participant was less than 30 years of age and the age dispersion reflects the aging of the Portuguese teaching class, since only 18 teachers are between 30 and 39 years old (14,2 %), 54 are between the ages of 40 and 49 (42,5%), 40 are between 50 and 59 years old (31,5%) and 15 are over 60 years old (11,8%).
As for the subjects taught, Maths and Experimental Sciences Department is the one with the most participants (27,6%) and Social Sciences and Humanities Department is the one with the least (15%)
Identifying where high school teachers feel more confortable as well as where they struggle the most is, in fact, an increasingly important issue, because both national and internationally, there is a growing awareness that teachers must follow the digital evolution and qualify themselves for the use of digital technologies in educational environments. However, many teachers often feel that, on the one hand, the existing specialised training does not keep up with their real needs and, on the other hand, the school bureaucracy in which they are involved interferes with the time available to pursue education in this area.
These perceptions, however, result, for the most part, from loose opinions and superficial statements, and not so much from scientific studies as to how the majority of teachers are in terms of specific digital competences. And it is in this context that the EU Science Hub, a department of the European Union, has sought to identify the needs of educators at the level of digital competences, through the preparation of questionnaires, analysis and reports that support the work to be developed in this area. According to its website, research began in 2005 and focuses on finding a response so that DTICs will be used to “rethink […] learning, for innovating education and training and for addressing new skills requirements (e. g., digital competence) to generate growth, employment and social inclusion” (
Among the different products that the EU Science Hub Department has been developing, DigCompEdu stands out, a report that presents a questionnaire with a common European framework for the digital skills of educators, launched in 2017, due to the awareness that teachers “need a set of digital competences specific to their profession in order to be able to seize the potential of digital technologies for enhancing and innovating education” (
The European Department then developed an online questionnaire (DigCompEdu CheckIn), with the collaboration of several European countries, which can be answered by teachers of all levels of education, in order to identify the level of digital competence in which they find themselves. However, more than just listing a set of competences, this instrument provides users with a report that, based on the answers given, makes suggestions for improving the practices teachers already have. This is relevant as it allows the user to understand what he or she can do to move to the next level, following a logic of continuous learning that teachers are familiar with.
This questionnaire is currently being tested and will soon be available in different languages to teachers from all over Europe. In its online page, the authors indicate that
this self-assessment tool is based on the European Framework for Digital Literacy Teachers, the European Digital Competence Framework for Educators (DigCompEdu). DigCompEdu is a competency model for teachers at all levels of education, from kindergarten to higher education and adult education, including VET, special education and non-formal learning contexts. DigCompEdu divides the digital competence teachers into 6 different areas [subdimensions] with a total of 22 competences. The focus of the model is not on technical skills. Rather, the model’s claim is to capture how digital media can be used to enhance and modernize education and training (
Below are the three dimensions and six subdimensions addressed in the questionnaire, and their competences (
The first subdimension —
The second subdimension —
The third subdimension —
The fourth subdimension —
The fifth subdimension —
Finally, the sixth subdimension —
In addition, it was possible to articulate the items presented in this tool for the recognition of digital competences, with another document, published in 2017 by the same working group, entitled
Both documents are very useful, since they offer everyone in general, and teachers in particular, a way to perceive their level of digital competence and, from there, to find which changes need to be made so that they can develop at that level.
One of the most interesting aspects in this instrument is that it is not limited to assessing the degree of use per se of digital technologies, but integrates it into a broad strategy of interaction between the student’s learning, evaluation and evolution. However, more than just listing a set of competences, this instrument provides users with a report that, based on the answers given, makes suggestions for improving the practices teachers already have. (
The instrument presents 22 items, each related to a specific competence identified in the document DigCompEdu (
Different tests were performed to test the internal consistency of the instrument. The corrected item-total correlation and the squared multiple correlation tests (
In this table, items signaled in red have a very low internal consistency (bellow .399); items in yellow have low internal consistency (bellow .499) and items with no color have good or very good internal consistency (above .500).
The same instrument, in its original English version, has already been applied to a group of 160 Moroccan teachers (
The methodology followed is based on a quantitative approach. For each of the 22 competences of the instrument, a statement (item) is presented and the participants must select one of the five options that best characterises their position in relation to the same statement, on a Likert scale, ranging from “no, I do not do this at all”, to “yes, I do this comprehensively”.
For example: Item 1-I use a variety of different digital communication channels for a variety of purposes.
For each of the items, the same levels of points are assigned, ranging from 0, for the first answer, to 4 points, for the last one. In this sense, the total of the instrument is 88 points, divided by six levels of competence:
A2-Explorer, between 20 and 33 points B1-Integrator, between 34 and 49 points B2-Expert, between 50 and 65 points C1-Leader, between 66 and 80 points C2-Pioneer, more than 80 points
Therefore, those who mostly choose the first option are thus considered “newcomers”. The truly pioneers will have to answer the highest option in at least two thirds of the 22 items to achieve the highest level of competence.
The results of the different dimensions show an average that places the participating teachers at the B1 —
Integrator: You experiment with digital technologies in a variety of contexts and for a range of purposes, integrating them into many of your practices. You creatively use them to enhance diverse aspects of your professional engagement. You are eager to expand your repertoire of practices. You are, however, still working on understanding which tools work best in which situations and on fitting digital technologies to pedagogic strategies and methods. You just need some more time for experimentation and reflection, complemented by collaborative encouragement and knowledge exchange to become Experts (B2).
As can be seen in
The analysis of each of the 22 competences, shows that of the three with the lowest values, two are part of the dimension related to
These three competences correspond to the following items of the instrument:
Of the 22 competences, the three that present higher average values (above 2,75 points) are numbers 3, 5 and 13, respectively, on
Until now, there aren’t many studies that not only assess high school teachers’ digital competences but also suggest ways to improve results obtained. With the questionnaire prepared by the EU Science Hub it became possible to identify in detail what digital competences seem to present more difficulties for teachers.
The results reflect that teachers still have a long way to go until they reach the desired digital fluency, level C2 —
Indeed, overall, the digital competence level of the teachers involved in this research is moderate, level B1 —
The results also highlight, within the first of these dimensions, subdimensions four —
Also, the dimension in which teachers perceive they have more competences is Dimension one —
All these are directly related to the definition presented for level B1,
The data show that teachers perceive that they have competences in the first dimension —
As technologies in the digital era are fast developing, education institutions must find mechanisms to develop innovative and sustainable ecosystems and learning environments in which new students can live as the true digital nomads they are, hiperconnected and moving around in a streamlined and hybrid way in face-to-face and virtual spaces.
Accordingly, the topic of digital fluency has become an inescapable issue in all discourses on educational technologies, with much discussion going on whether these resources really do help create these emerging ecosystems and learning environments. However, the question that keeps cropping up not only concerns the use of technologies and the existence of a digital literacy, but, deeper than that, has to do with understanding how this technology can be used to achieve the desired goals, in other words, what must be done to be a true “digitally fluent” user. Both teacher and students alike must try to “learn to work” in these digital environments and “learn to use” different tools, with teachers having added responsibilities in this process as they are the architects of these environments.
Therefore, and according to this research’s results and to the pilotstudy conducted by Benali et al. (2018), it can be concluded that in addition to the appropriate psychometric features of the instrument, the digital competence level is also identical in the Portuguese and Moroccan cohort of teachers.
Analyzing in more detail the twenty-two competences of the instrument, it’s clear that the competences that are most articulated with an adaptation to the different needs of its students are the ones that reflect greater difficulties to be achieved. When these refer to feedback, to selfregulated learning, to the adaptation of learning, that is, to practical work according to the needs of the students, greater difficulties arise in the adaptation to the digital context. On the other hand, competences related to a teacher’s individual work, to a reflexive practice and planning, are the ones that collet, on average, the higher results.
Similar to other studies in this area (
It is, therefore, necessary to initiate educational processes aimed at improving and developing the professional quality of teachers, using training models consistent with the pedagogical dynamics of the social web, such as the TPACK model (
Finally, although these resources produced by the EU Science Hub are very relevant as tools to assess the teachers’ level of digital competence, it is nevertheless necessary to conduct more such studies to validate the constructed instruments. In fact, the instrument used, translated to Portuguese with the authors’ permission, has proved to be trustworthy instrument with psychometric features, so its use in future studies to be developed in this area would be interesting. In fact, besides the good indicators of validity, overall the measures applied are characterised by what is believed to be good or adequate reliability, assuming, therefore, that they consistently assess the variables they are meant to measure, thus being an instrument capable of contributing to the assessment of teachers’ digital competence level. Despite these validity indicators, they need to be applied to larger samples, so that both dimensions with the lowest values can improve.
Nevertheless, the small dimension of the sample is a limitation to this study, and it is necessary to apply the instrument in all Portuguese territory, in order to obtain a much more representative sample of Portuguese teachers’ digital competences. The findings will allow the preparation of differentiated training, in digital competences, depending on difficulties found in the instrument’s different dimensions.
It can indeed be claimed that today’s education requires that the pedagogical process is seen in a different way. However, change should not be seen from a technological viewpoint only, but also in terms of mentality and of pedagogical practice. This implies a cultural change, as it calls for a review of the roles of teachers and students, and of the relation between them. Teaching and learning in this digital society using digital technologies is, without a doubt, an attractive challenge, yet at the same time very demanding. This is why it is so important to invest in training models, such as the TPACK, that identify the nature of knowledge required for integrating technology in teaching, allowing teachers to reach the desired digital fluency.
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