This study examines the role of information and communication technologies (ICTs) in educational reform in Africa, with a specific focus on South Africa’s Teacher Laptop Initiative (TLI). It explores how ICT integration can enhance teacher productivity, pedagogical effectiveness, and learning outcomes within education systems facing resource constraints and increasing demand.
The analysis highlights the structural challenges within African education systems, particularly the labour-intensive nature of teaching due to limited resources and insufficient technological integration. The TLI policy is positioned as a strategic intervention aimed at improving teaching quality through continuous professional development and enhanced pedagogical capacity.
Using the Technological, Pedagogical and Content Knowledge (TPACK) framework, the study evaluates both the prospects and challenges of ICT adoption in education. It argues that successful implementation of the TLI requires more than access to technology, emphasizing the importance of teacher training, institutional capacity, and sustained policy support.
The study concludes that ICT-driven education reform can significantly contribute to human capital development and broader development systems, provided that policy frameworks prioritize effective usage, continuous professional development, and collaborative implementation across public and private sectors.
This report is designed primarily for:
The publication applies a policy analysis and education systems framework, integrating ICT systems and institutional perspectives.
The analytical approach includes:
This framework enables a structured understanding of how technology, pedagogy, and policy interact to influence education outcomes and development systems.
Development Systems
ICT in Education
Education Reform
Teacher Development
Digital Learning
Education Policy
Educational Technology
Human Capital
Public Education
Skills Development
Technology Integration
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