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Exploring the uptake and integration of emerging technology into pedagogical practices in Health Sciences Education using an Activity Systems Approach

This study investigates integrating educational technology into pedagogy and the role of professional development within a Health Sciences Faculty. It is framed within the interpretivist paradigm and informed by Cultural-Historical Activity Theory (CHAT) and Technological Pedagogical Content Knowled...

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Main Author: Doyle, Gregory
Other Authors: Ng'ambi, Dickson
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: School of Education 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Doyle, Gregory
author2 Ng'ambi, Dickson
author_browse Doyle, Gregory
Ng'ambi, Dickson
author_facet Ng'ambi, Dickson
Doyle, Gregory
author_sort Doyle, Gregory
collection Thesis
description This study investigates integrating educational technology into pedagogy and the role of professional development within a Health Sciences Faculty. It is framed within the interpretivist paradigm and informed by Cultural-Historical Activity Theory (CHAT) and Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPACK). A systematic literature review followed PRISMA 2020 guidelines to ensure study selection and reporting transparency. The overarching question of why particular lecturers, referred to as BrightSparks, excel in educational technology integration and how they might influence professional development is investigated. Integrating educational technologies in health sciences, with a focus on innovation, remains a challenge for most lecturers. This study defines innovation as the transformative and pedagogically grounded integration of technology to enhance teaching and learning. Hence, this research explores the strategies, challenges, and contextual factors that shape successful educational technology adoption and integration. A sequential mixed methods approach was adopted, with the quantitative component using a Likert-scale online survey and the qualitative component using semi-structured online interviews. Participants were selected based on specific characteristics, particularly their proficiency in using educational technology and identification as potential BrightSparks. Among the 29 participants, 814 professional development activities were attended during the 12 months preceding filling in the survey, with individual attendance ranging from 0 to 60 and an average of about 28 activities per participant. Spearman's rank correlation and the Mann- Whitney U Test examined relationships between scores, demographic characteristics, and formal qualifications. Correlations emerged between academic qualification, teaching experience, and autonomy. The qualitative interviews revealed nuanced social and cultural dynamics influencing educational technology integration. Deductive thematic analysis using CHAT and TPACK, emphasising CHAT as the central framework for analysing BrightSparks' practices, illuminated the complexities of integrating educational technology, pedagogy, and content knowledge and identified contradictions affecting professional development. The combined quantitative and qualitative data derived from BrightSparks emphasised adaptability, agency, student-centredness, transformative pedagogical approaches, and institutional support, corroborated by literature in the field. These findings informed the development of a ‘bottom-up' Knowledge Framework for Technology Transformation (KF4TT), integrating the strengths of CHAT and TPACK to support educational technology integration through professional development in higher education. Essential components of the KF4TT include targeted professional development to enhance individual lecturers' TPACK competencies, institutional support, collaborative learning communities, strategies to address systemic barriers, and encouragement of lecturer agency to foster ownership and flexibility in using professional development. In contrast to traditional professional development models, flexibility, adaptability, and sustainability are key features of the KF4TT, enabling individual lecturers and institutional leaders to continuously review and adapt to rapidly changing educational technology in higher education.
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language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:31.121Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42062 Exploring the uptake and integration of emerging technology into pedagogical practices in Health Sciences Education using an Activity Systems Approach Doyle, Gregory Ng'ambi, Dickson Emerging technology Health sciences Education This study investigates integrating educational technology into pedagogy and the role of professional development within a Health Sciences Faculty. It is framed within the interpretivist paradigm and informed by Cultural-Historical Activity Theory (CHAT) and Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPACK). A systematic literature review followed PRISMA 2020 guidelines to ensure study selection and reporting transparency. The overarching question of why particular lecturers, referred to as BrightSparks, excel in educational technology integration and how they might influence professional development is investigated. Integrating educational technologies in health sciences, with a focus on innovation, remains a challenge for most lecturers. This study defines innovation as the transformative and pedagogically grounded integration of technology to enhance teaching and learning. Hence, this research explores the strategies, challenges, and contextual factors that shape successful educational technology adoption and integration. A sequential mixed methods approach was adopted, with the quantitative component using a Likert-scale online survey and the qualitative component using semi-structured online interviews. Participants were selected based on specific characteristics, particularly their proficiency in using educational technology and identification as potential BrightSparks. Among the 29 participants, 814 professional development activities were attended during the 12 months preceding filling in the survey, with individual attendance ranging from 0 to 60 and an average of about 28 activities per participant. Spearman's rank correlation and the Mann- Whitney U Test examined relationships between scores, demographic characteristics, and formal qualifications. Correlations emerged between academic qualification, teaching experience, and autonomy. The qualitative interviews revealed nuanced social and cultural dynamics influencing educational technology integration. Deductive thematic analysis using CHAT and TPACK, emphasising CHAT as the central framework for analysing BrightSparks' practices, illuminated the complexities of integrating educational technology, pedagogy, and content knowledge and identified contradictions affecting professional development. The combined quantitative and qualitative data derived from BrightSparks emphasised adaptability, agency, student-centredness, transformative pedagogical approaches, and institutional support, corroborated by literature in the field. These findings informed the development of a ‘bottom-up' Knowledge Framework for Technology Transformation (KF4TT), integrating the strengths of CHAT and TPACK to support educational technology integration through professional development in higher education. Essential components of the KF4TT include targeted professional development to enhance individual lecturers' TPACK competencies, institutional support, collaborative learning communities, strategies to address systemic barriers, and encouragement of lecturer agency to foster ownership and flexibility in using professional development. In contrast to traditional professional development models, flexibility, adaptability, and sustainability are key features of the KF4TT, enabling individual lecturers and institutional leaders to continuously review and adapt to rapidly changing educational technology in higher education. 2025-10-30T08:56:49Z 2025-10-30T08:56:49Z 2025 2025-10-30T08:53:09Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42062 en eng application/pdf School of Education Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Emerging technology
Health sciences
Education
Doyle, Gregory
Exploring the uptake and integration of emerging technology into pedagogical practices in Health Sciences Education using an Activity Systems Approach
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Exploring the uptake and integration of emerging technology into pedagogical practices in Health Sciences Education using an Activity Systems Approach
title_full Exploring the uptake and integration of emerging technology into pedagogical practices in Health Sciences Education using an Activity Systems Approach
title_fullStr Exploring the uptake and integration of emerging technology into pedagogical practices in Health Sciences Education using an Activity Systems Approach
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the uptake and integration of emerging technology into pedagogical practices in Health Sciences Education using an Activity Systems Approach
title_short Exploring the uptake and integration of emerging technology into pedagogical practices in Health Sciences Education using an Activity Systems Approach
title_sort exploring the uptake and integration of emerging technology into pedagogical practices in health sciences education using an activity systems approach
topic Emerging technology
Health sciences
Education
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42062
work_keys_str_mv AT doylegregory exploringtheuptakeandintegrationofemergingtechnologyintopedagogicalpracticesinhealthscienceseducationusinganactivitysystemsapproach