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THE ROLE OF SELF-EFFICACY IN PREDICTING USE OF DISTANCE EDUCATION TOOLS AND LEARNING MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
Author(s) -
İbrahim Arpacı
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
turkish online journal of distance education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.374
H-Index - 22
eISSN - 1309-4564
pISSN - 1302-6488
DOI - 10.17718/tojde.285715
Subject(s) - distance education , structural equation modeling , usability , psychology , self efficacy , learning management , technology acceptance model , perception , test (biology) , affect (linguistics) , medical education , mathematics education , applied psychology , computer science , knowledge management , social psychology , medicine , paleontology , communication , human–computer interaction , machine learning , neuroscience , biology
This study aims to investigate the role of self-efficacy in predicting students’ use of distance education tools and learning management systems (LMSs). A total of 124 undergraduate students who enrolled in a course on Distance Education and selected using convenience sampling willingly participated in the study. The participants had little prior knowledge about distance education tools and LMSs. Therefore, they received instructions from the researcher over the course of a semester. The study proposed a research model based on the Technology Acceptance Model that has been widely used to predict user acceptance and use. Structural equation modelling was used to test the research model against the data collected through questionnaire surveys. Pretest-posttest results suggested that the students had significant learning by participating in the instruction. The results of the main analysis also suggested that self-efficacy positively affects perceived ease of use, while usefulness and ease of use perceptions positively affect attitudes toward using distance education tools and systems. Implications are provided along with limitations of the study discussed.

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