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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The impact of primary school teachers' educational beliefs on the classroom use of computers

Ruben Hermans, +3 more
- 01 Dec 2008 - 
- Vol. 51, Iss: 4, pp 1499-1509
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TLDR
The hypothesis that teacher beliefs are significant determinants in explaining why teachers adopt computers in the classroom is supported, with results showing a positive effect of constructivist beliefs on the classroom use of computers.
Abstract
For many years, researchers have searched for the factors affecting the use of computers in the classroom. In studying the antecedents of educational computer use, many studies adopt a rather limited view because only technology-related variables, such as attitudes to computers and computer experience were taken into account. The present study centres on teachers' educational beliefs (constructivist beliefs, traditional beliefs) as antecedent of computer use, while controlling for the impact of technology-related variables (computer experience, general computer attitudes) and demographical variables (sex, age). In order to identify differences in determinants of computer use in the classroom, multilevel modelling was used (N=525). For measuring primary teachers' use of computers to support the leaching or learning process a modified version of the 'Class Use of Computers' scale of van Braak et al. [van Braak, J., Tondeur, J., & Valcke, M. (2004). Explaining different types of computer use among primary school teachers. European Journal of Psychology of Education, 19(4), 407-422] was used. The present article supports the hypothesis that teacher beliefs are significant determinants in explaining why teachers adopt computers in the classroom. Next to the impact of computer experience, general computer attitudes and gender, the results show a positive effect of constructivist beliefs on the classroom use of computers. Traditional beliefs have a negative impact on the classroom use of computers.

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Citations
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Teacher Technology Change: How Knowledge, Confidence, Beliefs, and Culture Intersect

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Teacher beliefs and technology integration practices: A critical relationship

TL;DR: This multiple case-study research was designed to revisit the question, ''How do the pedagogical beliefs and classroom technology practices of teachers, recognized for their technology uses, align?'' and suggest close alignment.
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Student teachers' thinking processes and ICT integration: Predictors of prospective teaching behaviors with educational technology

TL;DR: Results show that prospective ICT integration significantly correlates with all teacher related variables, except for gender, and could be directly predicted on the base of teacher thinking variables, and indirectly by the gender of the student teachers.
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Teaching and Learning with Technology: Effectiveness of ICT Integration in Schools

TL;DR: In this article, a survey questionnaire was distributed randomly to the total of 101 teachers from 10 public secondary schools in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and the data for this quantitative research were analyzed for both descriptive and inferential statistic using SPSS (version 21) software.
References
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CONOCIMIENTO Y ENSEÑANZA: FUNDAMENTOS DE LA NUEVA REFORMA 1 Knowledge and Teaching: Foundations of the New Reform

TL;DR: Lee S. Shulman as mentioned in this paper builds his foundation for teachi ng reform on an idea of teaching that emphasizes comprension and reasoning, transformation and reflection, and argues that this emphasis is justified by the resoluteness with which research and policy have so blatantly ignored those aspects of teaching in the past.
Journal ArticleDOI

Knowledge and Teaching: Foundations of the New Reform

TL;DR: Lee S. Shulman as mentioned in this paper builds his foundation for teaching reform on an idea of teaching that emphasizes comprehension and reasoning, transformation and reflection. "This emphasis is justified," he writes,...
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The New Meaning of Educational Change

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a brief history of educational change at the local and national level, and discuss the causes and problems of implementation and continuation of change at both the local level and the national level.
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Multilevel analysis : an introduction to basic and advanced multilevel modeling

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a multilevel regression model to estimate within-and between-group correlations using a combination of within-group correlation and cross-group evidence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Teachers’ Beliefs and Educational Research: Cleaning Up a Messy Construct:

TL;DR: The authors examines the meaning prominent researchers give to beliefs and how this meaning differs from that of knowledge, provides a definition of belief consistent with the best work in this area, and explores the nature of belief structures as outlined by key researchers.
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