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McInerney, Valentina; And Others – 1994
This paper reports on a study designed to examine the comparative efficacy of collaborative self-regulated learning and direct teaching on the reduction of computer anxiety among students, as well as the comparative effects of these models of teaching on student achievement. Using a quasi-experimental design, two equivalent groups of university…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Computer Anxiety, Computer Science Education, Conventional Instruction
McInerney, Valentina; And Others – 1994
This research emerged from an effort to develop a theory of computer anxiety relevant to beginning adult learners in a range of university disciplines. To this end, the first step was to design and refine an instrument which was reliable and valid for this population. The development of the "a priori" model of computer anxiety used in this study…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Attitude Measures, Computer Anxiety, Computer Science Education
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Tsai, Meng-Jung; Tsai, Chin-Chung – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2003
Through research data collected from 75 Taiwanese eighth graders enrolled in a computer course, this study revealed that students with higher-order metacognitive skills in monitoring their comprehension, selecting main ideas, and using resources helpful for learning tended to have higher computer achievement, better computer attitudes, and lower…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Computer Anxiety, Computer Attitudes, Computer Literacy
Wallace, Andrew R.; Sinclair, Kenneth E. – 1995
New electronic technologies provide powerful tools for managing and processing the rapidly increasing amounts of information available for learning; teachers, however, have often been slow in integrating computers into the curriculum. This study addresses the question of how prospective teachers construct affective and cognitive models about…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cognitive Structures, Computer Anxiety, Computer Attitudes
Morton, Allan – 1996
Integration is based on the assumption that computers should be an integral part of the learning process, both for servicing curriculum needs and as an object for study. The integration of computers into everyday classroom activity has proved to be more slow and difficult than expected, creating the notion that there are incentives enhancing the…
Descriptors: Computer Anxiety, Computer Attitudes, Computer Literacy, Computer Science Education