Abstract

Covid‐19 pandemic has caused a massive transformation in K‐12 settings towards online education. It is important to explore the factors that facilitate online teaching technology adoption of teachers during the pandemic. The aim of this study was to compare Learning Management System (LMS) acceptance of Finnish K‐12 teachers who have been using a specific LMS as part of their regular teaching before the Covid‐19 pandemic (experienced group) and teachers who started using it for emergency remote teaching during the pandemic (inexperienced group). Based on the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology framework, a self‐report questionnaire was administered to 196 teachers (n experienced = 127; n inexperienced = 69). Our findings showed no difference between the two groups of teachers in terms of performance expectancy, effort expectancy, LMS self‐efficacy and satisfaction. However, the experienced group had higher behavioural intention to use LMS in the future, reported receiving higher online teaching support and displayed higher online teaching self‐efficacy in terms of student engagement, classroom management, instructional strategies and ICT skills. For the experienced group, the most significant predictor of satisfaction with LMS was performance expectancy whereas for the inexperienced group, it was the effort expectancy. In terms of behavioural intention to use LMS in the future, the most significant predictor was the performance expectancy for both groups. Further, support was also a significant predictor of behavioural intention for the inexperienced group. Overall, our findings indicate that teachers should not be regarded as a unified profile when managing technology adoption in schools.

Highlights

  • Worldwide, there has been a growing emphasis on developing digital competencies in school settings (Siddiq et al, 2016)

  • The current study addresses this gap through studying Finnish K-12 teachers' technology acceptance for online teaching

  • The ongoing Covid-19 pandemic has caused an unprecedented shift towards online remote teaching

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Summary

Introduction

There has been a growing emphasis on developing digital competencies in school settings (Siddiq et al, 2016). A significant number of studies has explored the promise and challenges of teachers' ICT usage in school settings through a variety of frameworks (Scherer et al, 2019). Among those, Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) has been a prominent framework in studying teachers' behavioural intention to use technology for teaching and learning (Chao, 2019). UTAUT was able account for 70% of the variance in intention to use, which has cemented the model as a gold standard for measuring ICT acceptance and usage varying from, for example, mobile learning (Chao, 2019) to telepresence robot in an educational setting (Han & Conti, 2020). It has been applied to a limited extend in studying technology acceptance of in-service teachers in K-12 education (Wong, 2016)

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