Abstract

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to gain insight into learners’ behavioural intention to use the video lectures as their learning material. The behavioural intention construct is measured in terms of perceived ease of use and perceived usefulness of video lectures. It is hoped that the findings of this study will provide feedback as to learners’ intention to use as well as guidelines on how to improve the development of video lectures as the university gears to offer more courses in the fully online mode in the near future. Design/methodology/approach A total sample of 392 questionnaires were collected for this study using technology acceptance model model. Descriptive and inferential statistics are used as the main analytical tool to study the learners’ behavioural intention to use the video lectures as their learning material. The behavioural intention construct is measured in terms of two dimensions: perceived ease of use and perceived usefulness of video lectures. Findings In conclusion, the findings from this research study seem to suggest that OUM learners have a positive perception of video lectures with reference to the two dimensions of “ease of use” and “usefulness”, where ease of use is concerned, OUM learners rate content relevancy, appropriate language and viewing flexibility as the strongest points of video lectures. The aspects ranked lowest are technical (ability to play the video lecture smoothly from the beginning to the end) as well as objective of usage (video lectures are not rated high as revision material for exam preparation). Research limitations/implications Future studies can be conducted pertaining to issues on the context in which learning is taking place within higher education, various definitions of video, and ways of categorising and presenting these different types, teaching “with” and “through” video from the perspective of the lecturer and the educational institution, approaches to didactically embedding and integrating video into a course that results in effective learning and the process and support needed by the (traditional) lecturer to create and deploy various types of video content. Originality/value Over the last ten years, the production of video has gone from a complicated and technical process to one easily done by the general masses. It is now possible for anyone with a mobile phone to make a video recording. The question lies on whether the students have deeper meaning of learning via video lectures and the perception of students on using video lecture as teaching tool in the open and distance learning.

Highlights

  • The world of education has witnessed a dramatic shift in teaching and learning in the last two decades due to the advent of the internet and the wide usage of technology

  • These 221 video lectures were produced by academicians and the Centre for Instructional Design and Technology (CiDT) in tandem with the university’s future fully online courses pathway

  • 20 questions were asked in the questionnaire and this was later sorted out into two dimensions: perceived ease of use and perceived usefulness of video lectures

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The world of education has witnessed a dramatic shift in teaching and learning in the last two decades due to the advent of the internet and the wide usage of technology. OUM responded to this call by leveraging on internet technology to transmit education across to its learners via supported academic materials such as video video lecture lectures, e-modules, an online forum, self-learning tasks and exercises, etc. The trend seems to be an increasing emphasis on the development of video lectures, uploaded online on various learning platforms as well as on YouTube, to cater to the needs of learners who like to be “talked to”. The majority of these videos look like traditional lectures chopped up into smaller chunks, in the style of a “talking head”

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call