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Digital divide in education : a shift to ethical usageLau, Kai-kwong, Gervas, 劉啟光 January 2014 (has links)
Under the trend of ICT implementation in education, students’ learning becomes highly reliant on ICT. A student will thus suffer in his / her learning process if he / she lacks the chance of using ICT at home. This is what a divide in student’s learning is. As the occurrence of this divide is due to digital ICT devices and its effect is focussed on students’ academic performance, such divide is termed as digital divide in education (DDE). To bridge this divide, most governments around the world have spent a lot purchasing hardware for schools and even assisting students from low income families to have computers at home. The divide, however, still persists.
Nowadays, almost all students have the chance to use ICT. If a student is skilful in using ICT, he / she can learn more effectively by searching useful materials on the Internet. Otherwise, the student may lose his / her learning path. Thus there is a divide in learning between the skilled and unskilled students using ICT. In addition to the learning-related usages, recent studies showed that most students mainly use ICT to play games or for social communication. The divide in learning still exists and shifts to the difference between the students who use ICT for their learning and those who mainly use ICT for other purposes. Moreover, even some of the students using ICT for their studies, such as doing assignments, may use it inappropriately for copying and reassembling materials from the Internet as their assignments for submission. Such surely impedes their learning. The divide in learning then extends to whether students use ICT appropriately.
The aim of this research is to investigate the effect of DDE on students learning in terms of four facets: the chance of using ICT (access disparity), the skilfulness in using ICT (skill disparity), the ways in using ICT (usage disparity), and the appropriateness of using ICT (ethical disparity). The objective is three-fold. The first one is to examine whether the four facets of DDE affect students’ academic performance, the second one is to investigate whether the four facets are interrelated, and the third one is to explore the factors contributing to the four facets empirically. After reviewing various literatures, the potential factors are categorised into three groups: students’ personal factors, environmental factors, and ethics-related factors.
A survey has been conducted to achieve the objective. A pilot test was carried out first to check the reliability and validity of the designed questionnaire. 825 valid responses were obtained from a set of random samples taken from Secondary 2 students in Hong Kong. Statistical methods are employed for investigating the relationship between the four facets and also the factors of each facet.
The analysis results indicate that the latter three facets are the main constituents of DDE, significantly affecting students’ academic performance. The facets are also interrelated in a sequence. There is a significant effect of skill disparity on the other two disparities, and there is also a significant effect of usage disparity on ethical disparity. A number of key factors were also found for the facets, including students’ gender, SES, ICT experience, and also their parents’ parenting styles and ICT abilities. Their peers’ behaviour also plays an important role in affecting their appropriateness of using ICT. A number of policy implications are then proposed according to the results, in terms of financing approach of government (e.g. direct subsidy scheme), revision of curriculum, and enhancement of parenting skills. / published_or_final_version / Education / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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Characterizing and assessing collective responsibility in computer-supported collaborative inquiry environmentsSiqin, Tuya, 斯琴图亚 January 2014 (has links)
abstract / Education / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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Culture, communication, community: co-constructing knowledge and cultural images through computer-mediated communicationDucate, Lara Claire 28 August 2008 (has links)
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Effects of computer-assisted collaborative strategic reading on reading comprehension for high-school students with learning disabilitiesKim, Ae-hwa 28 August 2008 (has links)
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Development and evaluation of an interactive multimedia program on teaching nutrient composition of food: vitamin A and ironMeadows, Monica Roseman 28 August 2008 (has links)
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The effects of interactivity on learning: implications for stereotype changeKim, Hyojin 28 August 2008 (has links)
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The effects of reflective prompts and collaborative learning in hypermedia problem-based learning environments on problem solving and metacognitive skillsCorliss, Stephanie Brooks 28 August 2008 (has links)
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Student perceptions of a collaborative online learning environmentChangwatchai, Jantrathip 28 August 2008 (has links)
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Implementation of a laptop initiative: preservice foreign language teachers and factors influencing their computer useRader, Felicia Vanessa 28 August 2008 (has links)
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Engaging middle school students as multimedia designers: exploring students' project design skills and psychological sense of communityAnselm, Yu-ping Hsiao 28 August 2008 (has links)
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