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[Educational Journals - Psychology & Counseling]

Affiliations of Computer Self-Efficacy and Attitudes with Need for Learning Computer Skills


Yixin Zhang and Sue Espinoza
Journal of Educational Computing Research, Vol 17 No 4, 1997, p. 371-383

This study investigated relationships concerning computer efficacy, attitudes towards computers, and need for learning computer skills. A total of 296 undergraduate students from a regional state university participated in this study in 1996. Three research questions were measured by Attitudes toward Computer Technologies and Confidence and Desired Knowledge with Computer Technologies. Statistical analyses consisted of simultaneous multiple regression, ANOVA and Tukey's HSD. ANOVA revealed that students from computer classes had more need for learning computing skills than students from a non-computer class. Multiple regression revealed that attitudes toward computers, and computer self-efficacy, were significant predictors of the need for learning computer skills between two groups of students, although students from computer classes demanded a higher level of computing skills than those from a non-computer class.

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