1999
DOI: 10.1080/08886504.1999.10782623
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Changes in Attitudes Toward Computers and Use of Computers by University Faculty

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Cited by 31 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…The surveys continue on an annual basis and use questionnaires that were developed after extensive focus group interviews with students and faculties. The survey instruments represent moderately reliable items and include items about computer use, attitudes toward computers and general technographic and demographic information [8,12,[26][27][28]. The second component of the study included a qualitative methodology that was geared toward analyzing the cultural changes unfolding at the University as the computer enrichment progressed [29].…”
Section: Methodology and Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The surveys continue on an annual basis and use questionnaires that were developed after extensive focus group interviews with students and faculties. The survey instruments represent moderately reliable items and include items about computer use, attitudes toward computers and general technographic and demographic information [8,12,[26][27][28]. The second component of the study included a qualitative methodology that was geared toward analyzing the cultural changes unfolding at the University as the computer enrichment progressed [29].…”
Section: Methodology and Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These new environments, where students are submersed in the ubiquitous use of computers, are different from traditional campuses where computer use is dependent on the availability of computer labs. Laptop campuses, according to Mitra and Steffensmeier are computer-enriched environments [12]. Their research reveals that these "enriched environments" create a more positive shift in student's attitudes toward computing than the traditional carnpuses.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies directed at explaining this range of adoption reveal that instructional use of technology is multidimensional, involving interplay between faculty attitudes (Baldwin 1998;Paloff and Pratt 2001), professional characteristics (Corwin and Marcinkiewicz 1998), perceptions of the value of technology (Massy and Wilger 1998;'An Online Experience' 1995), and institutional factors (i.e., reward structures, classroom infrastructures, institutional IT resources) (Grunwald 2004;Walburton and Chen 2002;Mitra et al 1999;Gibson and Nocente 1998;Jacobson 1998;Knutel 1998). It is also important to remember that decisions to use technology in instruction are embedded in the personal epistemological beliefs of individual faculty (Hofer and Pintrich 1997), and that these beliefs guide the decisions faculty make about learning outcomes for their students, and the methods they believe will be most effective in achieving those outcomes (Stark and Lattuca 1997).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The other branch is composed of systematic studies documenting the effects of mandatory computing programs on student attitudes and learning as well as modes of teaching. Despite the dozens -:::>f campuses that have instituted laptop programs, the literature is limited to a handful of studies that focus on student experience (Mitra, 1998;Mitra & Steff~nsmeier, 2000;Platt & Bairnsfather, 20CO), faculty experience (Mitra, Steffensmeier, Lenzmeier, & Massoni, 1999) or both (Schrum, Skeele, & Grant, 2002). We can only speculate that programmatic assessments made for institutional use have been too narrowly focused to merit scholarly publication, although summaries of survey data (Holleque,20G2) and verbal journals (McCarty & Robinson, 1999) can be accessed at uniyersity Web sites.…”
Section: Anecdotal and Systematic Research Into Ubiquitous Computingmentioning
confidence: 99%