Author/Authors :
William Sugar، نويسنده , , Frank Crawley and Bethann Fine، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Teachers’ attitudes towards using information and communications technologies in
their respective classrooms are a key factor in facilitating successful technology integration
(Bitner & Bitner, 2002). Recently, a survey of public school teachers conducted
by the US Department of Education revealed that only “approximately one-third of the
teachers reported feeling well prepared or very well prepared to use computers and the
Internet for classroom instruction” (US Department of Education, 2000, p. viii). To
promote a more positive attitude towards integrating technologies in the classroom, it
is important to assess current technology attitudes amongst teachers and to promote
the use of interventions to change negative attitudes.
In our study (see Sugar, Crawley & Fine, 2004), we applied the Theory of Planned
Behaviour (TPB) (Ajzen, 1988) to assess teachers’ technology attitudes. During our
study, six teachers participated in semi-structured interviews, and teachers at four
schools completed a follow-up, a 45-item questionnaire. In this colloquium, we critiqued
the efficacy of the TPB as a basis for assessing teachers’ technology attitudes and beliefs.