Abstract

Recent pandemic circumstances facilitated a rapid shift to online learning. The home and school environments are now intertwined, so the connection of formal and informal environments is inevitable. The studies of online learning resources (OLR) use before the pandemic shed light on studies of pandemic school-home learning nexus. This paper examines the higher edu-cation situation before the pandemic. We discuss students’ use (N = 1323) of technology in learning in light of the role of educational technology, taking a socio-cultural perspective of learning in the broader context of formal and informal socio-cultural contexts and practices of interaction with humans and tools. An analysis of OLR identified three factors. The first two factors involved overlapping formal and informal learning, while the third was clearer collaboration and interaction for formal learning. The three factors were analysed using hierarchical regression to assess predictors for technolo-gy use, focussing on three factors. (1) Beliefs about learning with technolo-gy, examined within the two-dimensional structure of agency and commun-ion. (2) Self-regulated learning, which is critical for informal learning and al-so received significant attention in formal learning. Since it is claimed that teachers are not ready for integrating informal learning, we examined (3) teachers as role models as predictors of ICT use in learning. Finally, (4) since obstacles were among the primary critical factors in previous related studies, we examined whether they still have predictive power. The findings indicate that communion and agentic beliefs are the strongest predictors.

Highlights

  • Recent pandemic circumstances facilitated a rapid shift to online learning

  • Since it is claimed that teachers are not ready for integrating informal learning, we examined (3) teachers as role models as predictors of ICT use in learning

  • We examine how ICT use for self-regulated learning is perceived and its predictive role for technology use in formal and informal learning

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Summary

Introduction

Recent pandemic circumstances facilitated a rapid shift to online learning. The home and school environments are intertwined, so the connection of formal and iJET ‒ Vol 17, No 04, 2022informal environments was inevitable. Recent pandemic circumstances facilitated a rapid shift to online learning. The home and school environments are intertwined, so the connection of formal and iJET ‒ Vol 17, No 04, 2022. Studies of online learning resources (OLR) use before the pandemic shed light on studies of pandemic school-home learning nexus. We examine the situation in higher education before the pandemic. Digital practices and digital skills develop in socio-culturally situated practice. The socio-cultural theory of learning explains learning as interaction in the cultural context involving social contexts Learning is regarded as participation in communities of practice where situated learning is shared, and knowledge is co-constructed [2], utilising literacy as the primary means of meaningmaking [3] and operationalisation of cultural tools by mediation and internalisation in the process of the internal plane of mental activity [4]

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