Exploring students' use of ICT and expectations of learning methods
Exploring students' use of ICT and expectations of learning methods
This study investigates changing patterns in students’ use of electronic tools over a four year period, mapping changes in social communications with expectations in formal learning. The data, collected from 2001 to 2004, reflect the views of 2215 university entrants, the majority of whom were aged between 17 and 20 years across a range of disciplines (Business, Science and Engineering) on their first day at university. Although the data was collected prior to the emergence of the contemporary social technologies, it tests an underlying assertion that students’ expectations of learning are strongly influenced by their prior experiences. Results show no correlation between the extent of university entrants’ use of Information and Communications Technologies (ICT) and their expectations of how they will learn. Despite a dramatic increase in students’ use of ubiquitous technologies over a four-year period, their expectation of how they might learn at university remained relatively static over the same timeframe.
Littlejohn, Allison
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Margaryan, Anoush
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Vojt, Gaby
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1 January 2010
Littlejohn, Allison
a6b3dd77-b239-4461-8ffe-aabf64e840b1
Margaryan, Anoush
16dae8ce-b68f-492c-9da7-98d488a42103
Vojt, Gaby
20a2722e-e8b5-49e9-9f9f-01cf4e1b1387
Littlejohn, Allison, Margaryan, Anoush and Vojt, Gaby
(2010)
Exploring students' use of ICT and expectations of learning methods.
Electronic Journal of e-Learning.
Abstract
This study investigates changing patterns in students’ use of electronic tools over a four year period, mapping changes in social communications with expectations in formal learning. The data, collected from 2001 to 2004, reflect the views of 2215 university entrants, the majority of whom were aged between 17 and 20 years across a range of disciplines (Business, Science and Engineering) on their first day at university. Although the data was collected prior to the emergence of the contemporary social technologies, it tests an underlying assertion that students’ expectations of learning are strongly influenced by their prior experiences. Results show no correlation between the extent of university entrants’ use of Information and Communications Technologies (ICT) and their expectations of how they will learn. Despite a dramatic increase in students’ use of ubiquitous technologies over a four-year period, their expectation of how they might learn at university remained relatively static over the same timeframe.
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Exploring students' use of ICT
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Published date: 1 January 2010
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 500988
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500988
ISSN: 1479-4403
PURE UUID: 3f6fb9c6-aee6-4098-b5be-f9cb5a9779ed
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Date deposited: 20 May 2025 16:56
Last modified: 22 May 2025 02:15
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Contributors
Author:
Allison Littlejohn
Author:
Anoush Margaryan
Author:
Gaby Vojt
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