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Are Pedagogical Beliefs an Internal Barrier for Technology Integration? The Interdependent Nature of Teacher Beliefs

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Abstract

The purpose of this study was to examine how pre-service teachers’ competence beliefs, value beliefs, pedagogical beliefs, and their intention to integrate technology were related to one another. The sample was composed of 137 pre-service teachers from 22 schools in Taiwan. Using path modeling, the current study found that there was an interaction between competence and pedagogical beliefs. The relations between pedagogical beliefs and teachers’ intention to integrate technology were only significant when competence beliefs were low. These findings highlight the interdependent nature of teacher beliefs and suggest that pedagogical beliefs are not necessarily an internal barrier for teachers’ technology integration as long as competence beliefs are high.

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Data Availability

The data used in this study can be accessed by sending request emails to the corresponding author.

Code Availability

The code used in this study can be accessed by sending request emails to the corresponding author.

Notes

  1. Information on the correlations between teacher beliefs and technology integration at the construct level is not available in Wozney et al.’s (2006) study.

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Correspondence to Jen-Chia Chang.

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All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of conducting a social study. Participants included in this study voluntarily participated in the study. The purposes of the study and participants’ rights were explained prior to the study. The participants were informed that they could refuse to participate, and if they did participate in the study, all data would be treated confidentially. All the personally identifiable information was de-identified upon being collected.

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Cheng, SL., Chang, JC. & Romero, K. Are Pedagogical Beliefs an Internal Barrier for Technology Integration? The Interdependent Nature of Teacher Beliefs. Educ Inf Technol 27, 5215–5232 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10639-021-10835-2

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10639-021-10835-2

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