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Gardner, Donald G.; And Others – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1993
This empirical study of undergraduates compared the psychometric properties, i.e., reliability and validity, of four computer attitude measures and their subscales. Results are analyzed that indicate all measures tested were essentially equal in terms of reliability and validity, and attempts to empirically derive improved scales were…
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, Comparative Analysis, Computer Attitudes, Higher Education
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Mitra, Ananda; LaFrance, Betty; McCullough, Sandra – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2001
This longitudinal study examines the gender differences in attitudes toward computerization at a liberal arts university. Discusses gender effects research in computer use; diffusion of innovations; innovation adoption; and gender effects on innovation adoption. Results show women are more cautious in their interpretation of technological…
Descriptors: Adoption (Ideas), Computer Attitudes, Gender Issues, Higher Education
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Zhang, Yixin; Espinoza, Sue – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1997
This study of 296 undergraduate students investigates relationships concerning computer efficacy, attitudes toward computers, and need for learning computer skills. Multiple regression revealed attitudes toward computers, and computer self-efficacy, were significant predictors of the need for learning computing skills between two groups of…
Descriptors: Computer Anxiety, Computer Attitudes, Computer Literacy, Higher Education
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Mitra, Ananda; Lenzmeier, Stefne; Steffensmeier, Timothy; Avon, Rachel; Qu, Nancy; Hazen, Mike – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2000
Explores the nature of the relationships between gender, categories of computer use, and attitudes toward computers in a computer-enriched university environment where students had network access and laptop computers over a four-year period. Results indicate women were less positive about computers than men and their use levels were less frequent.…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Attitudes, Computer Networks, Females
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Katz, Yaacov J.; And Others – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1995
Reports on the development of the Hebrew language translation of the Bath County Computer Attitude Scale among a sample of 339 undergraduate students in Israel. The data support the reliability and validity based on frequency, correlation, reliability, and factor routines analyzed with the SPSS (Statistical Package for the Social Sciences).…
Descriptors: Computer Attitudes, Correlation, Factor Analysis, Foreign Countries
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Lawless, Kimberly A.; Kulikowich, Jonna M. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1996
Examines the navigational profiles of 42 undergraduate students processing a hypertext document. Three profiles emerged: (1) knowledge seekers, (2) feature explorers, and (3) apathetic hypertext users. Results indicate that students who are interested in computers and hypertext but who don't possess relevant amounts of domain knowledge aligned…
Descriptors: Cluster Analysis, Cognitive Style, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Attitudes
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Vogel, Lora Ann – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1994
Reports on a study conducted to evaluate how individual differences in anxiety levels affect performance on computer versus paper-and-pencil forms of verbal sections of the Graduate Record Examination. Contrary to the research hypothesis, analysis of scores revealed that extroverted and less computer anxious subjects scored significantly lower on…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Computer Anxiety, Computer Assisted Testing, Computer Attitudes
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Jennings, Susan Evans; Onwuegbuzie, Anthony J. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2001
Examines whether the variables of age, gender, attitudes toward mathematics, and student type are significantly related to four dimensions of computer attitude: anxiety, confidence, liking, and usefulness. Participants were 351 male and female undergraduate students, in three age groups, enrolled in either developmental or non-developmental…
Descriptors: Age, Computer Attitudes, Computer Uses in Education, Educational Technology
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Duggan, Ashley; Hess, Brian; Morgan, Deanna; Kim, Sooyeon; Wilson, Katherine – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2001
Describes a study that developed an instrument to provide a quantitative measure of the attitudes of undergraduates toward educational use of the Internet and studied selected behavioral correlates of those attitudes. Discusses keeping track of educational Internet sites, sharing educational Internet information with friends, and choosing classes…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Attitudes, Correlation, Educational Technology
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Shashaani, Lily – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1997
A study of 115 female and 87 male college students in an introductory computer science course surveyed student attitudes in relation to gender, experience, and parental encouragement and determined that females were less interested in computers and less confident than males and that males were more experienced. After the one semester course,…
Descriptors: College Students, Computer Attitudes, Computer Science Education, Computer Uses in Education
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Lim, Kee-Sook – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2002
Describes a study that evaluated the effects of computer experience, gender, and academic performance on computer attitude and user information system satisfaction in a university setting. Results of an analysis of variance showed that the personal characteristics made a difference in computer attitudes but not in academic computer system user…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Analysis of Variance, Computer Attitudes, Gender Issues
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Taylor, Harriet G.; Mounfield, Luegina C. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1994
Presents research conducted with a group of non-computer science majors to determine the effects of prior computing experience on success in college computer science courses. Specific relationships between prior experience factors and gender were studied, and the results indicate that pre-college computing can have an important role in achieving…
Descriptors: College Students, Computer Attitudes, Computer Literacy, Computer Science
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Bohlin, Roy M.; Hunt, Nancy P. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1995
Describes a study that investigated the effects of course structure variables, including course length and course frequency, on the computer anxiety, confidence, and attitudes of pre- and inservice teachers. Results show students in courses that met over a longer period of time had significantly greater changes in computer anxiety, confidence, and…
Descriptors: Change, Computer Anxiety, Computer Attitudes, Course Organization
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Brinkerhoff, Jonathan D.; Klein, James D.; Koroghlanian, Carol M. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2001
Examines effects of overview mode and computer experience on achievement, attitude and instructional time in a hypertext learning environment. Results indicated participants with high computer experience learned more from the program than those with low experience. Participants receiving structured or unstructured overview spent significantly more…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Attitudes, Computer Literacy, Computer Oriented Programs
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Newby, Michael; Fisher, Darrell – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1997
Describes two instruments: one designed to assess students' perceptions of various aspects of their computer laboratory environments and the other to measure attitudes toward computers and computing courses. These instruments were used to determine association between laboratory environment and student attitude. Findings indicate a close…
Descriptors: College Students, Computer Anxiety, Computer Attitudes, Computer Centers
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