How is technology accepted by users? A review of technology acceptance models and theories
How is technology accepted by users? A review of technology acceptance models and theories
This paper provides a literature review of the popular theories and models of technology acceptance of relevance to today’s technology developments in the 4E context. The original technology acceptance model (TAM) was derived from the theory of reasoned action and has since been developed and extended to include factors of age, gender, prior experience, ability, etc. It provides the framework to measure users’ perceptions of and intentions to use technology within and across organisations. Through research TAM has been empirically proven to be a robust model for understanding end-user adoption of technology and for examining the acceptance of new and developing technology by users with different characteristics in different organisations. The flexibility of TAM to be extended and modified to take into account other relevant factors makes it a powerful framework. This paper identifies the underpinning theories and potential application in a concise way and concludes that TAM has and will provide underpinning for further understanding of the pedagogy-technology-epistemology relationship in the development of technology use
e-education, e-learning, epistemology, information technology, perceptions, technology acceptance
Alomary, Azza
cbb5cd4c-f73f-4bd9-b77f-b12fc5fd2184
Woollard, John
85f363e3-9708-4740-acf7-3fe0d1845001
21 November 2015
Alomary, Azza
cbb5cd4c-f73f-4bd9-b77f-b12fc5fd2184
Woollard, John
85f363e3-9708-4740-acf7-3fe0d1845001
Alomary, Azza and Woollard, John
(2015)
How is technology accepted by users? A review of technology acceptance models and theories.
5th International Conference on 4E, London, United Kingdom.
6 pp
.
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
Abstract
This paper provides a literature review of the popular theories and models of technology acceptance of relevance to today’s technology developments in the 4E context. The original technology acceptance model (TAM) was derived from the theory of reasoned action and has since been developed and extended to include factors of age, gender, prior experience, ability, etc. It provides the framework to measure users’ perceptions of and intentions to use technology within and across organisations. Through research TAM has been empirically proven to be a robust model for understanding end-user adoption of technology and for examining the acceptance of new and developing technology by users with different characteristics in different organisations. The flexibility of TAM to be extended and modified to take into account other relevant factors makes it a powerful framework. This paper identifies the underpinning theories and potential application in a concise way and concludes that TAM has and will provide underpinning for further understanding of the pedagogy-technology-epistemology relationship in the development of technology use
Text
110-14486008271-4.pdf
- Author's Original
More information
Published date: 21 November 2015
Venue - Dates:
5th International Conference on 4E, London, United Kingdom, 2015-11-21
Keywords:
e-education, e-learning, epistemology, information technology, perceptions, technology acceptance
Organisations:
Southampton Education School
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 382037
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/382037
PURE UUID: e8b575f8-51f8-4ad6-89ba-3544faf6d9e2
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 19 Oct 2015 12:38
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:58
Export record
Contributors
Author:
Azza Alomary
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics