Article Notice – Teachers’ Perceived Barriers to Technology Integration during Online Learning

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Date:

December 4, 2024

Article Notice – Teachers’ Perceived Barriers to Technology Integration during Online Learning

Filed under: virtual school — Michael K. Barbour @ 7:03 am
Tags: articles, cyber school, education, high school, open scholarship, research, virtual school

The second of two articles that scrolled across my electronic desk over the past few days.

  • August 2023
  • International Journal of Technology in Education and Science 7(3):415-430
  • DOI: 10.46328/ijtes.495
  • License CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
  • Mark Lester Gesta
  • Lady Loren Lozano
  • Adriano Villarosa Patac

Abstract – The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on education, forcing schools to close and move to remote learning. Prospective math teachers are particularly challenged by technology integration. This is because mathematics is a subject that is often taught in a traditional, lecture-based format. It can be challenging for prospective math teachers to find effective ways to use technology online to demonstrate teaching and learning mathematics. In this study, the researchers investigated the perceived barriers to technology integration experienced by prospective math teachers during emergency remote learning. This study used a descriptive correlational survey design given to fifty-one (51) respondents enrolled at Surigao del Norte State University (SNSU). Data analysis was performed using SPSS. Moreover, the researchers utilized descriptive statistics such as frequency distributions and measures of central tendency, and non-parametric tests such as Fisher’s exact tests to treat the data. The results showed that the respondents demonstrated moderately positive beliefs regarding the appropriateness of curriculum content for the technology used and the complementarity of technology and content in the course. Second, the respondents generally had a high level of commitment to attending synchronous online learning sessions. Third, gender, age, and income class do not play a significant role in determining respondents’ perceived barriers to technology integration. Lastly, there was no significant relationship between respondents’ perceived barriers to technology integration and their self-reported attendance (p = 0.099). However, the p-value was close to the conventional threshold for statistical significance (p 0.05), suggesting that there may be a weak association between these two variables.

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