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Information and communications technology

Information and communications technology (ICT) is an extensional term for information technology (IT) that stresses the role of unified communications[1] and the integration of telecommunications (telephone lines and wireless signals) and computers, as well as necessary enterprise software, middleware, storage and audiovisual, that enable users to access, store, transmit, understand and manipulate information.

A Concept Map on the Use of Information and Communication Technology (Information) in Educational Assessment as per the International Federation of ICT (the IFGICT)

ICT is also used to refer to the convergence of audiovisuals and telephone networks with computer networks through a single cabling or link system. There are large economic incentives to merge the telephone networks with the computer network system using a single unified system of cabling, signal distribution, and management. ICT is an umbrella term that includes any communication device, encompassing radio, television, cell phones, computer and network hardware, satellite systems and so on, as well as the various services and appliances with them such as video conferencing and distance learning. ICT also includes analog technology, such as paper communication, and any mode that transmits communication.[2]

ICT is a broad subject and the concepts are evolving.[3] It covers any product that will store, retrieve, manipulate, transmit, or receive information electronically in a digital form (e.g., personal computers including smartphones, digital television, email, or robots). Skills Framework for the Information Age is one of many models for describing and managing competencies for ICT professionals for the 21st century.[4]

Etymology

The phrase "information and communication technologies" has been used by academic researchers since the 1980s.[5] The abbreviation "ICT" became popular after it was used in a report to the UK government by Dennis Stevenson in 1997,[6] and then in the revised National Curriculum for England, Wales and Northern Ireland in 2000. However, in 2012, the Royal Society recommended that the use of the term "ICT" should be discontinued in British schools "as it has attracted too many negative connotations".[7] From 2014, the National Curriculum has used the word computing, which reflects the addition of computer programming into the curriculum.[8]

Variations of the phrase have spread worldwide. The United Nations has created a "United Nations Information and Communication Technologies Task Force" and an internal "Office of Information and Communications Technology".[9]

Monetisation

The money spent on IT worldwide has been estimated as US$3.8 trillion [10] in 2017 and has been growing at less than 5% per year since 2009. The estimate 2018 growth of the entire ICT is 5%. The biggest growth of 16% is expected in the area of new technologies (IoT, Robotics, AR/VR, and AI).[11]

The 2014 IT budget of the US federal government was nearly $82 billion.[12] IT costs, as a percentage of corporate revenue, have grown 50% since 2002, putting a strain on IT budgets. When looking at current companies' IT budgets, 75% are recurrent costs, used to "keep the lights on" in the IT department, and 25% are the cost of new initiatives for technology development.[13]

The average IT budget has the following breakdown:[13]

  • 31% personnel costs (internal)
  • 29% software costs (external/purchasing category)
  • 26% hardware costs (external/purchasing category)
  • 14% costs of external service providers (external/services).

The estimate of money to be spent in 2022 is just over US$6 trillion.[14]

Technological capacity

The world's technological capacity to store information grew from 2.6 (optimally compressed) exabytes in 1986 to 15.8 in 1993, over 54.5 in 2000, and to 295 (optimally compressed) exabytes in 2007, and some 5 zetta bytes in 2014.[15][16] This is the informational equivalent to 1.25 stacks of CD-ROM from the earth to the moon in 2007, and the equivalent of 4,500 stacks of printed books from the earth to the sun in 2014. The world's technological capacity to receive information through one-way broadcast networks was 432 exabytes of (optimally compressed) information in 1986, 715 (optimally compressed) exabytes in 1993, 1.2 (optimally compressed) zettabytes in 2000, and 1.9 zettabytes in 2007.[15] The world's effective capacity to exchange information through two-way telecommunication networks was 281 petabytes of (optimally compressed) information in 1986, 471 petabytes in 1993, 2.2 (optimally compressed) exabytes in 2000, 65 (optimally compressed) exabytes in 2007,[15] and some 100 exabytes in 2014.[17] The world's technological capacity to compute information with humanly guided general-purpose computers grew from 3.0 × 10^8 MIPS in 1986, to 6.4 x 10^12 MIPS in 2007.[15]

ICT sector in the OECD

The following is a list of OECD countries by share of ICT sector in total value added in 2013.[18]

Rank Country ICT sector in % Relative size
1   South Korea 10.7 10.7
 
2   Japan 7.02 7.02
 
3   Ireland 6.99 6.99
 
4   Sweden 6.82 6.82
 
5   Hungary 6.09 6.09
 
6   United States 5.89 5.89
 
7   India 5.87 5.87
 
8   Czech Republic 5.74 5.74
 
9   Finland 5.60 5.6
 
10   United Kingdom 5.53 5.53
 
11   Estonia 5.33 5.33
 
12   Slovakia 4.87 4.87
 
13   Germany 4.84 4.84
 
14   Luxembourg 4.54 4.54
 
15   Switzerland 4.63 4.63
 
16   France 4.33 4.33
 
17   Slovenia 4.26 4.26
 
18   Denmark 4.06 4.06
 
19   Spain 4.00 4
 
20   Canada 3.86 3.86
 
21   Italy 3.72 3.72
 
22   Belgium 3.72 3.72
 
23   Austria 3.56 3.56
 
24   Portugal 3.43 3.43
 
25   Poland 3.33 3.33
 
26   Norway 3.32 3.32
 
27   Greece 3.31 3.31
 
28   Iceland 2.87 2.87
 
29   Mexico 2.77 2.77
 
30   Bangladesh 2.61 2.61
 

ICT Development Index

The ICT Development Index ranks and compares the level of ICT use and access across the various countries around the world.[19] In 2014 ITU (International Telecommunication Union) released the latest rankings of the IDI, with Denmark attaining the top spot, followed by South Korea. The top 30 countries in the rankings include most high-income countries where the quality of life is higher than average, which includes countries from Europe and other regions such as "Australia, Bahrain, Canada, Japan, Macao (China), New Zealand, Singapore, and the United States; almost all countries surveyed improved their IDI ranking this year."[20]

The WSIS process and ICT development goals

On 21 December 2001, the United Nations General Assembly approved Resolution 56/183, endorsing the holding of the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) to discuss the opportunities and challenges facing today's information society.[21] According to this resolution, the General Assembly related the Summit to the United Nations Millennium Declaration's goal of implementing ICT to achieve Millennium Development Goals. It also emphasized a multi-stakeholder approach to achieve these goals, using all stakeholders including civil society and the private sector, in addition to governments.

To help anchor and expand ICT to every habitable part of the world, "2015 is the deadline for achievements of the UN Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which global leaders agreed upon in the year 2000."[22]

In education

 
Today's society shows the ever-growing computer-centric lifestyle, which includes the rapid influx of computers in the modern classroom.

There is evidence that, to be effective in education, ICT must be fully integrated into the pedagogy. Specifically, when teaching literacy and math, using ICT in combination with Writing to Learn [23][24] produces better results than traditional methods alone or ICT alone.[25] The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), a division of the United Nations, has made integrating ICT into education as part of its efforts to ensure equity and access to education. The following, which was taken directly from a UNESCO publication on educational ICT, explains the organization's position on the initiative.

Information and Communication Technology can contribute to universal access to education, equity in education, the delivery of quality learning and teaching, teachers' professional development and more efficient education management, governance, and administration. UNESCO takes a holistic and comprehensive approach to promote ICT in education. Access, inclusion, and quality are among the main challenges they can address. The Organization's Intersectoral Platform for ICT in education focuses on these issues through the joint work of three of its sectors: Communication & Information, Education and Science.[26]

 
OLPC Laptops at school in Rwanda

Despite the power of computers to enhance and reform teaching and learning practices, improper implementation is a widespread issue beyond the reach of increased funding and technological advances with little evidence that teachers and tutors are properly integrating ICT into everyday learning. Intrinsic barriers such as a belief in more traditional teaching practices and individual attitudes towards computers in education as well as the teachers own comfort with computers and their ability to use them all as result in varying effectiveness in the integration of ICT in the classroom. [27]

Mobile learning for refugees

School environments play an important role in facilitating language learning. However, language and literacy barriers are obstacles preventing refugees from accessing and attending school, especially outside camp settings.[28]

Mobile-assisted language learning apps are key tools for language learning. Mobile solutions can provide support for refugees’ language and literacy challenges in three main areas: literacy development, foreign language learning and translations. Mobile technology is relevant because communicative practice is a key asset for refugees and immigrants as they immerse themselves in a new language and a new society. Well-designed mobile language learning activities connect refugees with mainstream cultures, helping them learn in authentic contexts.[28]

Developing countries

Africa

 
Representatives meet for a policy forum on M-Learning at UNESCO's Mobile Learning Week in March 2017

ICT has been employed as an educational enhancement in Sub-Saharan Africa since the 1960s. Beginning with television and radio, it extended the reach of education from the classroom to the living room, and to geographical areas that had been beyond the reach of the traditional classroom. As the technology evolved and became more widely used, efforts in Sub-Saharan Africa were also expanded. In the 1990s a massive effort to push computer hardware and software into schools was undertaken, with the goal of familiarizing both students and teachers with computers in the classroom. Since then, multiple projects have endeavoured to continue the expansion of ICT's reach in the region, including the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) project, which by 2015 had distributed over 2.4 million laptops to nearly 2 million students and teachers.[29]

The inclusion of ICT in the classroom, often referred to as M-Learning, has expanded the reach of educators and improved their ability to track student progress in Sub-Saharan Africa. In particular, the mobile phone has been most important in this effort. Mobile phone use is widespread, and mobile networks cover a wider area than internet networks in the region. The devices are familiar to student, teacher, and parent, and allow increased communication and access to educational materials. In addition to benefits for students, M-learning also offers the opportunity for better teacher training, which leads to a more consistent curriculum across the educational service area. In 2011, UNESCO started a yearly symposium called Mobile Learning Week with the purpose of gathering stakeholders to discuss the M-learning initiative.[29]

Implementation is not without its challenges. While mobile phone and internet use are increasing much more rapidly in Sub-Saharan Africa than in other developing countries, the progress is still slow compared to the rest of the developed world, with smartphone penetration only expected to reach 20% by 2017.[29] Additionally, there are gender, social, and geo-political barriers to educational access, and the severity of these barriers vary greatly by country. Overall, 29.6 million children in Sub-Saharan Africa were not in school in the year 2012, owing not just to the geographical divide, but also to political instability, the importance of social origins, social structure, and gender inequality. Once in school, students also face barriers to quality education, such as teacher competency, training and preparedness, access to educational materials, and lack of information management.[29]

In modern society, ICT is ever-present, with over three billion people having access to the Internet.[30] With approximately 8 out of 10 Internet users owning a smartphone, information and data are increasing by leaps and bounds.[31] This rapid growth, especially in developing countries, has led ICT to become a keystone of everyday life, in which life without some facet of technology renders most of clerical, work and routine tasks dysfunctional.

The most recent authoritative data, released in 2014, shows "that Internet use continues to grow steadily, at 6.6% globally in 2014 (3.3% in developed countries, 8.7% in the developing world); the number of Internet users in developing countries has doubled in five years (2009-2014), with two-thirds of all people online now living in the developing world."[20]

However, hurdles are still large. "Of the 4.3 billion people not yet using the Internet, 90% live in developing countries. In the world's 42 Least Connected Countries (LCCs), which are home to 2.5 billion people, access to ICTs remains largely out of reach, particularly for these countries' large rural populations."[32] ICT has yet to penetrate the remote areas of some countries, with many developing countries dearth of any type of Internet. This also includes the availability of telephone lines, particularly the availability of cellular coverage, and other forms of electronic transmission of data. The latest "Measuring the Information Society Report" cautiously stated that the increase in the aforementioned cellular data coverage is ostensible, as "many users have multiple subscriptions, with global growth figures sometimes translating into little real improvement in the level of connectivity of those at the very bottom of the pyramid; an estimated 450 million people worldwide live in places which are still out of reach of mobile cellular service."[30]

Favourably, the gap between the access to the Internet and mobile coverage has decreased substantially in the last fifteen years, in which "2015 was the deadline for achievements of the UN Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which global leaders agreed upon in the year 2000, and the new data show ICT progress and highlight remaining gaps."[22] ICT continues to take on a new form, with nanotechnology set to usher in a new wave of ICT electronics and gadgets. ICT newest editions into the modern electronic world include smartwatches, such as the Apple Watch, smart wristbands such as the Nike+ FuelBand, and smart TVs such as Google TV. With desktops soon becoming part of a bygone era, and laptops becoming the preferred method of computing, ICT continues to insinuate and alter itself in the ever-changing globe.

Information communication technologies play a role in facilitating accelerated pluralism in new social movements today. The internet according to Bruce Bimber is "accelerating the process of issue group formation and action"[33] and coined the term accelerated pluralism to explain this new phenomena. ICTs are tools for "enabling social movement leaders and empowering dictators"[34] in effect promoting societal change. ICTs can be used to garner grassroots support for a cause due to the internet allowing for political discourse and direct interventions with state policy[35] as well as change the way complaints from the populace are handled by governments. Furthermore, ICTs in a household are associated with women rejecting justifications for intimate partner violence. According to a study published in 2017, this is likely because “access to ICTs exposes women to different ways of life and different notions about women’s role in society and the household, especially in culturally conservative regions where traditional gender expectations contrast observed alternatives."[36]

In health care

Applications of ICTs in health care include:

In science

Applications of ICTs in science, research and development, and academia include:

Models of access to ICT

Scholar Mark Warschauer defines a “models of access” framework for analyzing ICT accessibility. In the second chapter of his book, Technology and Social Inclusion: Rethinking the Digital Divide, he describes three models of access to ICTs: devices, conduits, and literacy.[39] Devices and conduits are the most common descriptors for access to ICTs, but they are insufficient for meaningful access to ICTs without third model of access, literacy.[39] Combined, these three models roughly incorporate all twelve of the criteria of “Real Access” to ICT use, conceptualized by a non-profit organization called Bridges.org in 2005:[40]

  1. Physical access to technology
  2. Appropriateness of technology
  3. Affordability of technology and technology use
  4. Human capacity and training
  5. Locally relevant content, applications, and services
  6. Integration into daily routines
  7. Socio-cultural factors
  8. Trust in technology
  9. Local economic environment
  10. Macro-economic environment
  11. Legal and regulatory framework
  12. Political will and public support

Devices

The most straightforward model of access for ICT in Warschauer’s theory is devices.[39] In this model, access is defined most simply as the ownership of a device such as a phone or computer.[39] Warschauer identifies many flaws with this model, including its inability to account for additional costs of ownership such as software, access to telecommunications, knowledge gaps surrounding computer use, and the role of government regulation in some countries.[39] Therefore, Warschauer argues that considering only devices understates the magnitude of digital inequality. For example, the Pew Research Center notes that 96% of Americans own a smartphone,[41] although most scholars in this field would contend that comprehensive access to ICT in the United States is likely much lower than that.

Conduits

A conduit requires a connection to a supply line, which for ICT could be a telephone line or Internet line. Accessing the supply requires investment in the proper infrastructure from a commercial company or local government and recurring payments from the user once the line is set up. For this reason, conduits usually divide people based on their geographic locations. As a Pew Research Center poll reports, rural Americans are 12% less likely to have broadband access than other Americans, thereby making them less likely to own the devices.[42] Additionally, these costs can be prohibitive to lower-income families accessing ICTs. These difficulties have led to a shift toward mobile technology; fewer people are purchasing broadband connection and are instead relying on their smartphones for Internet access, which can be found for free at public places such as libraries.[43] Indeed, smartphones are on the rise, with 37% of Americans using smartphones as their primary medium for internet access[43] and 96% of Americans owning a smartphone.[41]

Literacy

 
Youth and adults with ICT skills, 2017

In 1981, Sylvia Scribner and Michael Cole studied a tribe in Liberia, the Vai people, who have their own local script. Since about half of those literate in Vai have never had formal schooling, Scribner and Cole were able to test more than 1,000 subjects to measure the mental capabilities of literates over non-literates.[44] This research, which they laid out in their book The Psychology of Literacy,[44] allowed them to study whether the literacy divide exists at the individual level. Warschauer applied their literacy research to ICT literacy as part of his model of ICT access.

Scribner and Cole found no generalizable cognitive benefits from Vai literacy; instead, individual differences on cognitive tasks were due to other factors, like schooling or living environment.[44] The results suggested that there is “no single construct of literacy that divides people into two cognitive camps; [...] rather, there are gradations and types of literacies, with a range of benefits closely related to the specific functions of literacy practices.”[39] Furthermore, literacy and social development are intertwined, and the literacy divide does not exist on the individual level.

Warschauer draws on Scribner and Cole’s research to argue that ICT literacy functions similarly to literacy acquisition, as they both require resources rather than a narrow cognitive skill. Conclusions about literacy serve as the basis for a theory of the digital divide and ICT access, as detailed below:

There is not just one type of ICT access, but many types. The meaning and value of access varies in particular social contexts. Access exists in gradations rather than in a bipolar opposition. Computer and Internet use brings no automatic benefit outside of its particular functions. ICT use is a social practice, involving access to physical artifacts, content, skills, and social support. And acquisition of ICT access is a matter not only of education but also of power.[39]

Therefore, Warschauer concludes that access to ICT cannot rest on devices or conduits alone; it must also engage physical, digital, human, and social resources.[39] Each of these categories of resources have iterative relations with ICT use. If ICT is used well, it can promote these resources, but if it is used poorly, it can contribute to a cycle of underdevelopment and exclusion.[44]

Environmental impact of ICTs

Progress during the century

In the early 21st century a rapid development of ICT services and electronical devices took place, in which the internet servers multiplied by a factor of 1000 to 395 million and its still increasing. This increase can be explained by moores law, which states, that the development of ICT increases every year by 16-20%, so it will double in numbers every four to five years.[45] Alongside this development and the high investments in increasing demand for ICT capable products, a high environmental impact came with it. Software and Hardware development as well as production causing already in 2008 the same amount of CO2-emissions as global air travels.[45]

There are two sides of ICT, the positive environmental possibilities and the shadow side. On the positive side, studies proved, that for instance in the OECD countries a reduction of 0.235% energy use is caused by an increase in ICT capital by 1%.[46] On the other side the more digitization is happening, the more energy is consumed, that means for OECD countries 1% increase in internet users causes a raise of 0.026% electricity consumption per capita and for emerging countries the impact is more than 4 times as high.

Currently the scientific forecasts are showing an increase up to 30700 TWh in 2030 which is 20 times more than it was in 2010.[46]

Implication

To tackle the environmental issues of ICT, the EU commission plans proper monitoring and reporting of the GHG emissions of different ICT platforms, countries and infrastructure in general. Further the establishment of international norms for reporting and compliance are promoted to foster transparency in this sector.[47]

Moreover it is suggested by scientists to make more ICT investments to exploit the potentials of ICT to alleviate CO2-emissions in general, and to implement a more effective coordination of ICT, energy and growth policies.[48] Consequently, applying the principle of the coase theorem makes sense. It recommends to make investments there, where the marginal avoidance costs of emissions are the lowest, therefore in the developing countries with comparatively lower technological standards and policies as high-tech countries. With these measures, ICT can reduce environmental damage from economic growth and energy consumption by facilitating communication and infrastructure.

In problem-solving

ICTs could also be used to address environmental issues, including climate change, in various ways, including ways beyond education.[49][50][additional citation(s) needed]

See also

References

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Sources

  •   This article incorporates text from a free content work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO. Text taken from A Lifeline to learning: leveraging mobile technology to support education for refugees, UNESCO, UNESCO. UNESCO. To learn how to add open license text to Wikipedia articles, please see this how-to page. For information on reusing text from Wikipedia, please see the terms of use.

Further reading

  • Cantoni, L., & Danowski, J. A. (Eds.). (2015). Communication and Technology. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.
  • Carnoy, Martin. "." Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, 2005.
  • "." Asian Development Bank, 2009.
  • Grossman, G.; Helpman, E. (2005). "Outsourcing in a global economy". Review of Economic Studies. 72: 135–159. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.159.5158. doi:10.1111/0034-6527.00327.
  • Feridun, Mete; Karagiannis, Stelios (2009). "Growth Effects of Information and Communication Technologies: Empirical Evidence from the Enlarged EU". Transformations in Business and Economics. 8 (2): 86–99.
  • Oliver, Ron. "." University, Perth, Western Australia, 2002.
  • Walter Ong, Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word (London, UK: Routledge, 1988), in particular Chapter 4
  • Measuring the Information Society: The ICT Development Index (PDF). International Telecommunication Union. 2013. p. 254.
  • Measuring the Information Society Report: 2014. International Telecommunication Union.

External links

  • ICT Facts and Figures
  • ICT Industry Statistics

information, communications, technology, extensional, term, information, technology, that, stresses, role, unified, communications, integration, telecommunications, telephone, lines, wireless, signals, computers, well, necessary, enterprise, software, middlewa. Information and communications technology ICT is an extensional term for information technology IT that stresses the role of unified communications 1 and the integration of telecommunications telephone lines and wireless signals and computers as well as necessary enterprise software middleware storage and audiovisual that enable users to access store transmit understand and manipulate information A Concept Map on the Use of Information and Communication Technology Information in Educational Assessment as per the International Federation of ICT the IFGICT ICT is also used to refer to the convergence of audiovisuals and telephone networks with computer networks through a single cabling or link system There are large economic incentives to merge the telephone networks with the computer network system using a single unified system of cabling signal distribution and management ICT is an umbrella term that includes any communication device encompassing radio television cell phones computer and network hardware satellite systems and so on as well as the various services and appliances with them such as video conferencing and distance learning ICT also includes analog technology such as paper communication and any mode that transmits communication 2 ICT is a broad subject and the concepts are evolving 3 It covers any product that will store retrieve manipulate transmit or receive information electronically in a digital form e g personal computers including smartphones digital television email or robots Skills Framework for the Information Age is one of many models for describing and managing competencies for ICT professionals for the 21st century 4 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Monetisation 3 Technological capacity 4 ICT sector in the OECD 5 ICT Development Index 6 The WSIS process and ICT development goals 7 In education 7 1 Mobile learning for refugees 7 2 Developing countries 7 2 1 Africa 8 In health care 9 In science 10 Models of access to ICT 10 1 Devices 10 2 Conduits 10 3 Literacy 11 Environmental impact of ICTs 11 1 Progress during the century 11 2 Implication 11 3 In problem solving 12 See also 13 References 14 Sources 15 Further reading 16 External linksEtymology EditThe phrase information and communication technologies has been used by academic researchers since the 1980s 5 The abbreviation ICT became popular after it was used in a report to the UK government by Dennis Stevenson in 1997 6 and then in the revised National Curriculum for England Wales and Northern Ireland in 2000 However in 2012 the Royal Society recommended that the use of the term ICT should be discontinued in British schools as it has attracted too many negative connotations 7 From 2014 the National Curriculum has used the word computing which reflects the addition of computer programming into the curriculum 8 Variations of the phrase have spread worldwide The United Nations has created a United Nations Information and Communication Technologies Task Force and an internal Office of Information and Communications Technology 9 Monetisation EditThe money spent on IT worldwide has been estimated as US 3 8 trillion 10 in 2017 and has been growing at less than 5 per year since 2009 The estimate 2018 growth of the entire ICT is 5 The biggest growth of 16 is expected in the area of new technologies IoT Robotics AR VR and AI 11 The 2014 IT budget of the US federal government was nearly 82 billion 12 IT costs as a percentage of corporate revenue have grown 50 since 2002 putting a strain on IT budgets When looking at current companies IT budgets 75 are recurrent costs used to keep the lights on in the IT department and 25 are the cost of new initiatives for technology development 13 The average IT budget has the following breakdown 13 31 personnel costs internal 29 software costs external purchasing category 26 hardware costs external purchasing category 14 costs of external service providers external services The estimate of money to be spent in 2022 is just over US 6 trillion 14 Technological capacity EditThe world s technological capacity to store information grew from 2 6 optimally compressed exabytes in 1986 to 15 8 in 1993 over 54 5 in 2000 and to 295 optimally compressed exabytes in 2007 and some 5 zetta bytes in 2014 15 16 This is the informational equivalent to 1 25 stacks of CD ROM from the earth to the moon in 2007 and the equivalent of 4 500 stacks of printed books from the earth to the sun in 2014 The world s technological capacity to receive information through one way broadcast networks was 432 exabytes of optimally compressed information in 1986 715 optimally compressed exabytes in 1993 1 2 optimally compressed zettabytes in 2000 and 1 9 zettabytes in 2007 15 The world s effective capacity to exchange information through two way telecommunication networks was 281 petabytes of optimally compressed information in 1986 471 petabytes in 1993 2 2 optimally compressed exabytes in 2000 65 optimally compressed exabytes in 2007 15 and some 100 exabytes in 2014 17 The world s technological capacity to compute information with humanly guided general purpose computers grew from 3 0 10 8 MIPS in 1986 to 6 4 x 10 12 MIPS in 2007 15 ICT sector in the OECD EditThe following is a list of OECD countries by share of ICT sector in total value added in 2013 18 Rank Country ICT sector in Relative size1 South Korea 10 7 10 7 2 Japan 7 02 7 02 3 Ireland 6 99 6 99 4 Sweden 6 82 6 82 5 Hungary 6 09 6 09 6 United States 5 89 5 89 7 India 5 87 5 87 8 Czech Republic 5 74 5 74 9 Finland 5 60 5 6 10 United Kingdom 5 53 5 53 11 Estonia 5 33 5 33 12 Slovakia 4 87 4 87 13 Germany 4 84 4 84 14 Luxembourg 4 54 4 54 15 Switzerland 4 63 4 63 16 France 4 33 4 33 17 Slovenia 4 26 4 26 18 Denmark 4 06 4 06 19 Spain 4 00 4 20 Canada 3 86 3 86 21 Italy 3 72 3 72 22 Belgium 3 72 3 72 23 Austria 3 56 3 56 24 Portugal 3 43 3 43 25 Poland 3 33 3 33 26 Norway 3 32 3 32 27 Greece 3 31 3 31 28 Iceland 2 87 2 87 29 Mexico 2 77 2 77 30 Bangladesh 2 61 2 61 ICT Development Index EditThe ICT Development Index ranks and compares the level of ICT use and access across the various countries around the world 19 In 2014 ITU International Telecommunication Union released the latest rankings of the IDI with Denmark attaining the top spot followed by South Korea The top 30 countries in the rankings include most high income countries where the quality of life is higher than average which includes countries from Europe and other regions such as Australia Bahrain Canada Japan Macao China New Zealand Singapore and the United States almost all countries surveyed improved their IDI ranking this year 20 The WSIS process and ICT development goals EditOn 21 December 2001 the United Nations General Assembly approved Resolution 56 183 endorsing the holding of the World Summit on the Information Society WSIS to discuss the opportunities and challenges facing today s information society 21 According to this resolution the General Assembly related the Summit to the United Nations Millennium Declaration s goal of implementing ICT to achieve Millennium Development Goals It also emphasized a multi stakeholder approach to achieve these goals using all stakeholders including civil society and the private sector in addition to governments To help anchor and expand ICT to every habitable part of the world 2015 is the deadline for achievements of the UN Millennium Development Goals MDGs which global leaders agreed upon in the year 2000 22 In education Edit Today s society shows the ever growing computer centric lifestyle which includes the rapid influx of computers in the modern classroom There is evidence that to be effective in education ICT must be fully integrated into the pedagogy Specifically when teaching literacy and math using ICT in combination with Writing to Learn 23 24 produces better results than traditional methods alone or ICT alone 25 The United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organisation UNESCO a division of the United Nations has made integrating ICT into education as part of its efforts to ensure equity and access to education The following which was taken directly from a UNESCO publication on educational ICT explains the organization s position on the initiative Information and Communication Technology can contribute to universal access to education equity in education the delivery of quality learning and teaching teachers professional development and more efficient education management governance and administration UNESCO takes a holistic and comprehensive approach to promote ICT in education Access inclusion and quality are among the main challenges they can address The Organization s Intersectoral Platform for ICT in education focuses on these issues through the joint work of three of its sectors Communication amp Information Education and Science 26 OLPC Laptops at school in Rwanda Despite the power of computers to enhance and reform teaching and learning practices improper implementation is a widespread issue beyond the reach of increased funding and technological advances with little evidence that teachers and tutors are properly integrating ICT into everyday learning Intrinsic barriers such as a belief in more traditional teaching practices and individual attitudes towards computers in education as well as the teachers own comfort with computers and their ability to use them all as result in varying effectiveness in the integration of ICT in the classroom 27 Mobile learning for refugees Edit Main article Mobile learning for refugees School environments play an important role in facilitating language learning However language and literacy barriers are obstacles preventing refugees from accessing and attending school especially outside camp settings 28 Mobile assisted language learning apps are key tools for language learning Mobile solutions can provide support for refugees language and literacy challenges in three main areas literacy development foreign language learning and translations Mobile technology is relevant because communicative practice is a key asset for refugees and immigrants as they immerse themselves in a new language and a new society Well designed mobile language learning activities connect refugees with mainstream cultures helping them learn in authentic contexts 28 Developing countries Edit This section may be too long to read and navigate comfortably Please consider splitting content into sub articles condensing it or adding subheadings Please discuss this issue on the article s talk page January 2022 Africa Edit Representatives meet for a policy forum on M Learning at UNESCO s Mobile Learning Week in March 2017 ICT has been employed as an educational enhancement in Sub Saharan Africa since the 1960s Beginning with television and radio it extended the reach of education from the classroom to the living room and to geographical areas that had been beyond the reach of the traditional classroom As the technology evolved and became more widely used efforts in Sub Saharan Africa were also expanded In the 1990s a massive effort to push computer hardware and software into schools was undertaken with the goal of familiarizing both students and teachers with computers in the classroom Since then multiple projects have endeavoured to continue the expansion of ICT s reach in the region including the One Laptop Per Child OLPC project which by 2015 had distributed over 2 4 million laptops to nearly 2 million students and teachers 29 The inclusion of ICT in the classroom often referred to as M Learning has expanded the reach of educators and improved their ability to track student progress in Sub Saharan Africa In particular the mobile phone has been most important in this effort Mobile phone use is widespread and mobile networks cover a wider area than internet networks in the region The devices are familiar to student teacher and parent and allow increased communication and access to educational materials In addition to benefits for students M learning also offers the opportunity for better teacher training which leads to a more consistent curriculum across the educational service area In 2011 UNESCO started a yearly symposium called Mobile Learning Week with the purpose of gathering stakeholders to discuss the M learning initiative 29 Implementation is not without its challenges While mobile phone and internet use are increasing much more rapidly in Sub Saharan Africa than in other developing countries the progress is still slow compared to the rest of the developed world with smartphone penetration only expected to reach 20 by 2017 29 Additionally there are gender social and geo political barriers to educational access and the severity of these barriers vary greatly by country Overall 29 6 million children in Sub Saharan Africa were not in school in the year 2012 owing not just to the geographical divide but also to political instability the importance of social origins social structure and gender inequality Once in school students also face barriers to quality education such as teacher competency training and preparedness access to educational materials and lack of information management 29 In modern society ICT is ever present with over three billion people having access to the Internet 30 With approximately 8 out of 10 Internet users owning a smartphone information and data are increasing by leaps and bounds 31 This rapid growth especially in developing countries has led ICT to become a keystone of everyday life in which life without some facet of technology renders most of clerical work and routine tasks dysfunctional The most recent authoritative data released in 2014 shows that Internet use continues to grow steadily at 6 6 globally in 2014 3 3 in developed countries 8 7 in the developing world the number of Internet users in developing countries has doubled in five years 2009 2014 with two thirds of all people online now living in the developing world 20 However hurdles are still large Of the 4 3 billion people not yet using the Internet 90 live in developing countries In the world s 42 Least Connected Countries LCCs which are home to 2 5 billion people access to ICTs remains largely out of reach particularly for these countries large rural populations 32 ICT has yet to penetrate the remote areas of some countries with many developing countries dearth of any type of Internet This also includes the availability of telephone lines particularly the availability of cellular coverage and other forms of electronic transmission of data The latest Measuring the Information Society Report cautiously stated that the increase in the aforementioned cellular data coverage is ostensible as many users have multiple subscriptions with global growth figures sometimes translating into little real improvement in the level of connectivity of those at the very bottom of the pyramid an estimated 450 million people worldwide live in places which are still out of reach of mobile cellular service 30 Favourably the gap between the access to the Internet and mobile coverage has decreased substantially in the last fifteen years in which 2015 was the deadline for achievements of the UN Millennium Development Goals MDGs which global leaders agreed upon in the year 2000 and the new data show ICT progress and highlight remaining gaps 22 ICT continues to take on a new form with nanotechnology set to usher in a new wave of ICT electronics and gadgets ICT newest editions into the modern electronic world include smartwatches such as the Apple Watch smart wristbands such as the Nike FuelBand and smart TVs such as Google TV With desktops soon becoming part of a bygone era and laptops becoming the preferred method of computing ICT continues to insinuate and alter itself in the ever changing globe Information communication technologies play a role in facilitating accelerated pluralism in new social movements today The internet according to Bruce Bimber is accelerating the process of issue group formation and action 33 and coined the term accelerated pluralism to explain this new phenomena ICTs are tools for enabling social movement leaders and empowering dictators 34 in effect promoting societal change ICTs can be used to garner grassroots support for a cause due to the internet allowing for political discourse and direct interventions with state policy 35 as well as change the way complaints from the populace are handled by governments Furthermore ICTs in a household are associated with women rejecting justifications for intimate partner violence According to a study published in 2017 this is likely because access to ICTs exposes women to different ways of life and different notions about women s role in society and the household especially in culturally conservative regions where traditional gender expectations contrast observed alternatives 36 In health care EditApplications of ICTs in health care include Telehealth A review found that in general outcomes of such ICT use which were envisioned as early as 1925 37 are or can be as good as in person care with health care use staying similar 38 Artificial intelligence in healthcare Use and development of software for COVID 19 pandemic mitigation mHealth Clinical decision support systems and expert systems Health administration and hospital information systems Other health information technology and health informaticsIn science EditApplications of ICTs in science research and development and academia include Internet research Online research methods Science communication and communication between scientists Scholarly databases Applied metascienceModels of access to ICT EditScholar Mark Warschauer defines a models of access framework for analyzing ICT accessibility In the second chapter of his book Technology and Social Inclusion Rethinking the Digital Divide he describes three models of access to ICTs devices conduits and literacy 39 Devices and conduits are the most common descriptors for access to ICTs but they are insufficient for meaningful access to ICTs without third model of access literacy 39 Combined these three models roughly incorporate all twelve of the criteria of Real Access to ICT use conceptualized by a non profit organization called Bridges org in 2005 40 Physical access to technology Appropriateness of technology Affordability of technology and technology use Human capacity and training Locally relevant content applications and services Integration into daily routines Socio cultural factors Trust in technology Local economic environment Macro economic environment Legal and regulatory framework Political will and public supportDevices Edit The most straightforward model of access for ICT in Warschauer s theory is devices 39 In this model access is defined most simply as the ownership of a device such as a phone or computer 39 Warschauer identifies many flaws with this model including its inability to account for additional costs of ownership such as software access to telecommunications knowledge gaps surrounding computer use and the role of government regulation in some countries 39 Therefore Warschauer argues that considering only devices understates the magnitude of digital inequality For example the Pew Research Center notes that 96 of Americans own a smartphone 41 although most scholars in this field would contend that comprehensive access to ICT in the United States is likely much lower than that Conduits Edit A conduit requires a connection to a supply line which for ICT could be a telephone line or Internet line Accessing the supply requires investment in the proper infrastructure from a commercial company or local government and recurring payments from the user once the line is set up For this reason conduits usually divide people based on their geographic locations As a Pew Research Center poll reports rural Americans are 12 less likely to have broadband access than other Americans thereby making them less likely to own the devices 42 Additionally these costs can be prohibitive to lower income families accessing ICTs These difficulties have led to a shift toward mobile technology fewer people are purchasing broadband connection and are instead relying on their smartphones for Internet access which can be found for free at public places such as libraries 43 Indeed smartphones are on the rise with 37 of Americans using smartphones as their primary medium for internet access 43 and 96 of Americans owning a smartphone 41 Literacy Edit Youth and adults with ICT skills 2017 In 1981 Sylvia Scribner and Michael Cole studied a tribe in Liberia the Vai people who have their own local script Since about half of those literate in Vai have never had formal schooling Scribner and Cole were able to test more than 1 000 subjects to measure the mental capabilities of literates over non literates 44 This research which they laid out in their book The Psychology of Literacy 44 allowed them to study whether the literacy divide exists at the individual level Warschauer applied their literacy research to ICT literacy as part of his model of ICT access Scribner and Cole found no generalizable cognitive benefits from Vai literacy instead individual differences on cognitive tasks were due to other factors like schooling or living environment 44 The results suggested that there is no single construct of literacy that divides people into two cognitive camps rather there are gradations and types of literacies with a range of benefits closely related to the specific functions of literacy practices 39 Furthermore literacy and social development are intertwined and the literacy divide does not exist on the individual level Warschauer draws on Scribner and Cole s research to argue that ICT literacy functions similarly to literacy acquisition as they both require resources rather than a narrow cognitive skill Conclusions about literacy serve as the basis for a theory of the digital divide and ICT access as detailed below There is not just one type of ICT access but many types The meaning and value of access varies in particular social contexts Access exists in gradations rather than in a bipolar opposition Computer and Internet use brings no automatic benefit outside of its particular functions ICT use is a social practice involving access to physical artifacts content skills and social support And acquisition of ICT access is a matter not only of education but also of power 39 Therefore Warschauer concludes that access to ICT cannot rest on devices or conduits alone it must also engage physical digital human and social resources 39 Each of these categories of resources have iterative relations with ICT use If ICT is used well it can promote these resources but if it is used poorly it can contribute to a cycle of underdevelopment and exclusion 44 Environmental impact of ICTs EditSee also Category Environmental technology and Information and communication technologies for environmental sustainability Progress during the century Edit In the early 21st century a rapid development of ICT services and electronical devices took place in which the internet servers multiplied by a factor of 1000 to 395 million and its still increasing This increase can be explained by moores law which states that the development of ICT increases every year by 16 20 so it will double in numbers every four to five years 45 Alongside this development and the high investments in increasing demand for ICT capable products a high environmental impact came with it Software and Hardware development as well as production causing already in 2008 the same amount of CO2 emissions as global air travels 45 There are two sides of ICT the positive environmental possibilities and the shadow side On the positive side studies proved that for instance in the OECD countries a reduction of 0 235 energy use is caused by an increase in ICT capital by 1 46 On the other side the more digitization is happening the more energy is consumed that means for OECD countries 1 increase in internet users causes a raise of 0 026 electricity consumption per capita and for emerging countries the impact is more than 4 times as high Currently the scientific forecasts are showing an increase up to 30700 TWh in 2030 which is 20 times more than it was in 2010 46 Implication Edit To tackle the environmental issues of ICT the EU commission plans proper monitoring and reporting of the GHG emissions of different ICT platforms countries and infrastructure in general Further the establishment of international norms for reporting and compliance are promoted to foster transparency in this sector 47 Moreover it is suggested by scientists to make more ICT investments to exploit the potentials of ICT to alleviate CO2 emissions in general and to implement a more effective coordination of ICT energy and growth policies 48 Consequently applying the principle of the coase theorem makes sense It recommends to make investments there where the marginal avoidance costs of emissions are the lowest therefore in the developing countries with comparatively lower technological standards and policies as high tech countries With these measures ICT can reduce environmental damage from economic growth and energy consumption by facilitating communication and infrastructure In problem solving Edit ICTs could also be used to address environmental issues including climate change in various ways including ways beyond education 49 50 additional citation s needed See also EditCloud computing Cognitive infocommunications DICOM Digital divide Example of Information and communication technologies for education Gender digital divide Global e Schools and Communities Initiative Infocommunications Information Age Market information systems Mobile Web Picture archiving and communication system 21st century skills World Information Technology and Services Alliance Information technologyReferences Edit Murray James 2011 12 18 Cloud network architecture and ICT Modern Network Architecture TechTarget ITKnowledgeExchange Archived from the original on 2017 09 20 Retrieved 2013 08 18 Ozdamli Fezile Ozdal Hasan May 2015 Life long Learning Competence Perceptions of the Teachers and Abilities in Using Information Communication Technologies Procedia Social and Behavioral Sciences 182 718 725 doi 10 1016 j sbspro 2015 04 819 ICT What is it www tutor2u net Retrieved 2015 09 01 IEEE CS Adopts Skills Framework for the Information Age IEEE Computer Society www computer org Retrieved 14 March 2018 William Melody et al Information and Communication Technologies Social Sciences Research and Training A Report by the ESRC Programme on Information and Communication Technologies ISBN 0 86226 179 1 1986 Roger Silverstone et al Listening to a long conversation an ethnographic approach to the study of information and communication technologies in the home Cultural Studies 5 2 pages 204 227 1991 The Independent ICT in Schools Commission Information and Communications Technology in UK Schools An Independent Inquiry 1997 Impact noted in Jim Kelly What the Web is Doing for Schools Archived 2011 07 11 at the Wayback Machine Financial Times 2000 Royal Society Shut down or restart The way forward for computing in UK schools 2012 page 18 Department for Education National curriculum in England computing programmes of study United Nations Office of Information and Communications Technology About IDC Global ICT Spending 2018 3 8T IDC The premier global market intelligence company Retrieved 2018 09 24 IDC Global ICT Spending Forecast 2018 2022 IDC The premier global market intelligence company Retrieved 2018 09 24 www whitehouse gov a b IT Costs The Costs Growth And Financial Risk Of Software Assets OMT CO Operations Management Technology Consulting GmbH Archived from the original on 12 August 2013 Retrieved 26 June 2011 IDC Global ICT Spending Forecast 2018 2022 IDC The premier global market intelligence company Retrieved 2018 09 24 a b c d The World s Technological Capacity to Store Communicate and Compute Information Martin Hilbert and Priscila Lopez 2011 Science 332 6025 60 65 see also free access to the study and video animation Gillings Michael R Hilbert Martin Kemp Darrell J 2016 Information in the Biosphere Biological and Digital Worlds Trends in Ecology amp Evolution 31 3 180 189 doi 10 1016 j tree 2015 12 013 PMID 26777788 Hilbert Martin 2016 The bad news is that the digital access divide is here to stay Domestically installed bandwidths among 172 countries for 1986 2014 Telecommunications Policy 40 6 567 581 doi 10 1016 j telpol 2016 01 006 Figure 1 9 Share of ICT sector in total value added 2013 doi 10 1787 888933224163 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Measuring the Information Society PDF International Telecommunication Union 2011 Retrieved 25 July 2013 a b ITU releases annual global ICT data and ICT Development Index country ranking librarylearningspace com 2014 11 30 Retrieved 2015 09 01 Basic information about was International Telecommunication Union 17 January 2006 Retrieved 26 May 2012 a b ICT Facts and Figures The world in 2015 ITU Retrieved 2015 09 01 What is Writing to Learn WAC Clearinghouse Evidence for How Writing Can Improve Reading Carnegie Org 2010 PDF Genlott Annika Agelii Gronlund Ake August 2016 Closing the gaps Improving literacy and mathematics by ict enhanced collaboration Computers amp Education 99 68 80 doi 10 1016 j compedu 2016 04 004 ICT in Education Unesco Unesco Retrieved 10 March 2016 Blackwell C K Lauricella A R and Wartella E 2014 Factors influencing digital technology use in early childhood education Computers amp Education 77 pp 82 90 a b UNESCO 2018 A Lifeline to learning leveraging mobile technology to support education for refugees UNESCO ISBN 978 92 3 100262 5 a b c d Agence Francaise de Developpement February 2015 Digital services for education in Africa PDF unesco org Retrieved 19 May 2018 a b ITU releases annual global ICT data and ICT Development Index country rankings www itu int Retrieved 2015 09 01 Survey 1 In 6 Internet Users Own A Smartwatch Or Fitness Tracker ARC Retrieved 2015 09 01 ITU releases annual global ICT data and ICT Development Index country rankings www itu int Retrieved 2015 09 01 Bimber Bruce 1998 01 01 The Internet and Political Transformation Populism Community and Accelerated Pluralism Polity 31 1 133 160 doi 10 2307 3235370 JSTOR 3235370 S2CID 145159285 Hussain Muzammil M Howard Philip N 2013 03 01 What Best Explains Successful Protest Cascades ICTs and the Fuzzy Causes of the Arab Spring International Studies Review 15 1 48 66 doi 10 1111 misr 12020 hdl 2027 42 97489 ISSN 1521 9488 Kirsh David 2001 The Context of Work Human Computer Interaction 16 2 4 305 322 doi 10 1207 S15327051HCI16234 12 S2CID 28915179 Cardoso LG Sorenson SB Violence against women and household ownership of radios computers and phones in 20 countries American Journal of Public Health 2017 107 7 1175 1181 Novak Matt Telemedicine Predicted in 1925 Smithsonian Magazine Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 27 January 2022 Albritton Jordan Ortiz Alexa Wines Roberta Booth Graham DiBello Michael Brown Stephen Gartlehner Gerald Crotty Karen 7 December 2021 Video Teleconferencing for Disease Prevention Diagnosis and Treatment PDF Annals of Internal Medicine 175 2 256 266 doi 10 7326 m21 3511 ISSN 0003 4819 PMID 34871056 S2CID 244923066 a b c d e f g h Warschauer Mark 2004 Technology and Social Inclusion Cambridge Massachusetts The MIT Press pp 39 49 ISBN 0 262 23224 3 The Real Access Real Impact framework for improving the way that ICT is used in development PDF 26 December 2005 a b Mobile Fact Sheet Pew Research Center Perrin Andrew Digital gap between rural and nonrural America persists Pew Research Center a b Anderson Monica 13 June 2019 Mobile Technology and Home Broadband 2019 Pew Research Center a b c d Scribner and Cole Sylvia and Michael 1981 The Psychology of Literacy ISBN 9780674433014 a b Gerhard Fettweis Zimmermann Ernesto 2008 ITC Energy Consumption Trends and Challenges The 11th International Symposium on Wireless Personal Multimedia Communications WPMC 2008 via ResearchGate a b Lange Steffen Pohl Johanna Santarius Tilman 2020 10 01 Digitalization and energy consumption Does ICT reduce energy demand Ecological Economics 176 106760 doi 10 1016 j ecolecon 2020 106760 ISSN 0921 8009 S2CID 224947774 European Commission 2021 Rolling Plan for ICT standardization 2021 ec europa eu Retrieved 2022 01 08 Lu Wen Cheng 2018 12 01 The impacts of information and communication technology energy consumption financial development and economic growth on carbon dioxide emissions in 12 Asian countries Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 23 8 1351 1365 doi 10 1007 s11027 018 9787 y ISSN 1573 1596 S2CID 158412820 Fox Evan Michael 2019 Mobile Technology A Tool to Increase Global Competency Among Higher Education Students The International Review of Research in Open and Distributed Learning 20 2 doi 10 19173 irrodl v20i2 3961 ISSN 1492 3831 S2CID 242492985 Digitalisation for a circular economySources Edit This article incorporates text from a free content work Licensed under CC BY SA 3 0 IGO Text taken from A Lifeline to learning leveraging mobile technology to support education for refugees UNESCO UNESCO UNESCO To learn how to add open license text to Wikipedia articles please see this how to page For information on reusing text from Wikipedia please see the terms of use Further reading EditCantoni L amp Danowski J A Eds 2015 Communication and Technology Berlin De Gruyter Mouton Carnoy Martin ICT in Education Possibilities and Challenges Universitat Oberta de Catalunya 2005 Good Practice in Information and Communication Technology for Education Asian Development Bank 2009 Grossman G Helpman E 2005 Outsourcing in a global economy Review of Economic Studies 72 135 159 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 159 5158 doi 10 1111 0034 6527 00327 Feridun Mete Karagiannis Stelios 2009 Growth Effects of Information and Communication Technologies Empirical Evidence from the Enlarged EU Transformations in Business and Economics 8 2 86 99 Oliver Ron The Role of ICT in Higher Education for the 21st Century ICT as a Change Agent for Education University Perth Western Australia 2002 Walter Ong Orality and Literacy The Technologizing of the Word London UK Routledge 1988 in particular Chapter 4 Measuring the Information Society The ICT Development Index PDF International Telecommunication Union 2013 p 254 Measuring the Information Society Report 2014 International Telecommunication Union External links Edit Look up ICT or information and communications technology in Wiktionary the free dictionary ICT Facts and Figures ICT Industry Statistics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Information and communications technology amp oldid 1129685205, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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