It is with much sadness we say
goodbye to our collaborator, mentor and long time friend in TC3 and particularly WG3.3. Andrew wanted to maximise the benefits of information and communication technology (ICT) and minimise the
harms. To this end he had undertaken world class research and development on using computers for educating children with special needs, e-assessment to transform curricula, and the improvement of
learning outcomes by impact factors greater than 3.0. Andrew trained as a teacher in Bristol, England, then spent 2 years working in Afikpo, Nigeria. Returning to the UK, he taught in a high
school, then became director of an advisory centre on computers for children with special needs. His family then moved to Australia, where he taught computer science before joining the University
of Tasmania. Over the next 25 years, he taught and researched information technology education, authoring many academic papers. His PhD thesis was one of the most popular in the university
library. He was Deputy Editor of the journal Education and Information Technologies. Andrew joined the IFIP Discipline Group for Quantum Computing in 2022. He was a passionate advocate for the
inclusion of quantum computing programming in senior secondary schools. He was also mindful of the promises and threats of quantum communication systems. Andrew’s funded research investigated the
transformative use of computers to teach integral calculus, quantum mechanics in primary schools, and e-exams, where students take their own computers into the exam hall. He was chair of Working
Group 3.3 (research into educational applications of information technologies) for IFIP/UNESCO from 2016 to 2019 and was given the IFIP Service Award in 2019. Within Australia, he was a member of
the ICT Educator’s Committee of the Australian Computer Society from 2017 to 2021. During this time, he led a national survey of digital technologies teaching. Since retiring, he has remained
academically engaged, with several papers published and a book editorship. Outside academia, Andrew was an avid archer (preferring the longbow), continental archery judge and director of Archery
Australia. He was awarded the silver medal in the Archery Australia 2017 Club Challenge.
