BEYOND COMPUTER LITERACY: TECHNOLOGY INTEGRATION AND CURRICULUM TRANSFORMAT...: EBSCOhost - 2 views
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Personal computers, the Internet, smartphones, and other forms of information and communication technology (ICT) have changed our world, our job, our personal lives, as well as how we manage our knowledge and time effectively and efficiently. Research findings in the past decades have acknowledged and affirmed that the content the ICT medium carries is as important as the ICT medium itself. These studies also added a third constituent to the structure of ICT usage and integration; that is the pedagogical approach of teaching and learning. One of the modern ICT trends of organizations involves the incorporation and integration of a blended approach of teaching and learning; which combines the traditional face-to-face instructor-led method with ICT-based online teaching and learning environment. This quasi-experimental research study was deployed to evaluate and identity the effect and usefulness of a blended ' pedagogical approach of teaching and learning on students' academic achievement, motivation, and attitudes. A total of 128 (i.e., 64 experimental group and 64 control group) undergraduate students in the College of Education (COE) at Kuwait University (KU) participated in this study. The results revealed that the students enrolled in the experimental group were significantly outscoring their counterparts in the control group. They submitted projects with better quality; earned higher final grades; attended more online training courses; took more ICDL tests; and the majority attended all classes. These findings imply that the potential of a blended approach of teaching and learning is endless. It can produce robust teaching and learning environments and experiences. It can also reveal that teaching and learning with such method or strategy, while integrating and incorporating ICT tools, can be fun.
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SampleA sample of 128 female undergraduate students from the College of Education at KU enrolled in six sections of an undergraduate-level course entitled "Computing in Education 0840-235" for the Fall and Spring semesters 2010-2011 participated in this research study. The study involved the application of a blended model of teaching and learning in only three sections (i.e., experimental group). Whereas, another three sections (i.e., control group) of the same course were taught in a traditional manner. Other extents of exploitations were not included. The selected sections included students from a variety of majors. The two groups were of comparable size (i.e., 64 students in the experimental group and 64 students in the control group) and gender balance, as well as they evinced a similar mix of academic and ethnic backgrounds. All participants were senior students. This academic course is a three-credit compulsory requirement for the professional preparation of all undergraduate students in the College of Education.
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he study's data was collected over a nine-month period. The academic course taught the same subject content by the same instructor using different delivery methods for instruction--a blended pedagogical approach of teaching and learning versus a traditional face-to-face instructor-led approach. The data was collected in two phases. The first phase started in the Fall semester 2010-2011 where the researchers used a traditional face-to-face instructor-led approach of teaching and learning with the control group. However, in the second phase, which started in the Spring semester 2010-2011, the researchers exploited a blended learning and teaching environment model, with the experimental group, wherein ICT tools are effectively and efficiently utilized and integrated into teaching and learning along with traditional face-to-face instruction.