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Teo, Timothy; Zhou, Mingming – Interactive Learning Environments, 2017
Prior research has attempted to incorporate different personal variables within extant theories of technology acceptance models (TAMs). This study further extends TAM by incorporating teachers' conceptions of teaching and learning (CoTL) in two forms: constructivist and traditional conceptions. The moderating effects of teachers' demographic…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Computer Attitudes, Instruction, Learning
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Teo, Timothy; Noyes, Jan – Interactive Learning Environments, 2014
Pre-service teachers' self-reported intentions to use information technology were studied. Two hundred and sixty-four participants completed a survey questionnaire measuring their responses to four constructs (performance expectancy, effort expectancy, social influence and facilitating conditions) derived from the Unified Theory of Acceptance and…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Intention, Computer Uses in Education, Computer Attitudes
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Kubiatko, Milan; Halakova, Zuzana; Nagyova, Sona; Nagy, Tibor – Interactive Learning Environments, 2011
The pervasive involvement of information and communication technologies and computers in our daily lives influences changes of attitude toward computers. We focused on finding these ecological effects in the differences in computer attitudes as a function of gender and age. A questionnaire with 34 Likert-type items was used in our research. The…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Computer Attitudes, Gender Differences, Anxiety
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Teo, Timothy – Interactive Learning Environments, 2006
Research has found that computer attitudes not only play an influential role in determining the extent to which students accept the computer as a learning tool but also future behaviours towards the computer such as using it for further study and vocational purposes. A sample of 183 post-secondary students was assessed for their computer attitudes…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Postsecondary Education, Computer Attitudes, Gender Differences