Bridging pedagogical theory and educational technology practice: a coherent framework for assistant teacher preparation and infrastructure in the US and Albania
This paper synthesizes prevailing theoretical frameworks and empirical observations to clarify two interrelated barriers to technology-mediated learning: (i) the disjunction between pedagogical best practices and entrenched, teacher-centric classroom routines, and (ii) the deficit of reliable infra- structural support. We use a conceptual synthesis anchored in the principle that effective instruction—both about and through technology—should originate from learners’ needs and intrinsic motivations. The analysis critically engages policy and research evidence (including a National Education Policy Center brief and Mathis & Enyedy’s work) and adopts a comparative lens between the United States and Albania to identify leverage points in teacher preparation and system design. Four research-aligned intervention tracks are proposed: (1) strategic strengthening of technological infrastructure; (2) iterative, context-embedded professional learning for in-service educators; (3) preservice curricular reforms that embed technology–pedagogy integration; and (4) cultivation of reflective methodological mindsets that privilege student agency and diverse learning practices. This is a synthesis/review paper and does not report original experimental statistics. Across contexts, technology improves learning when it is designed as part of student-centred ped- agogy, supported by sustained professional learning and dependable infrastructure—rather than introduced as a stand-alone “innovation.” The paper offers a concise, actionable roadmap to align theoretical imperatives with classroom real- ities, with specific relevance to assistant-teacher preparation and inclusive practice for learners with special educational needs.