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Educators' challenges and behavioural intention to adopt open educational resources : the case of Africa University, Zimbabwe

A review of the literature confirms that Open Educational Resources (OER) initiatives have created free, openly licenced and high quality educational resources for anyone to use. However, these free, openly licensed and high quality educational resources appear to remain largely unused by Africa Uni...

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Main Author: Kandiero, Agripah
Other Authors: Hodgkinson-Williams, Cheryl
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Education 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Kandiero, Agripah
author2 Hodgkinson-Williams, Cheryl
author_browse Hodgkinson-Williams, Cheryl
Kandiero, Agripah
author_facet Hodgkinson-Williams, Cheryl
Kandiero, Agripah
author_sort Kandiero, Agripah
collection Thesis
description A review of the literature confirms that Open Educational Resources (OER) initiatives have created free, openly licenced and high quality educational resources for anyone to use. However, these free, openly licensed and high quality educational resources appear to remain largely unused by Africa University academics in the educationally resource-impoverished Zimbabwe. The objectives of this research study are to explore the challenges and enablers experienced by Africa University educators who may potentially adopt OER, and ascertain barriers preventing them from adopting OER in mainstream teaching. The sample consists of 45 full time educators from Africa University. Data was gathered by means of a survey questionnaire administered by the researcher. A modified version of the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) model developed by Venkatesh et al. (2003) was used. The UTAUT model was created from a fusion of eight diffusion of innovation models, and this gave it conceptual superiority over other candidate models. Key findings indicate that the extent to which educators believe that using OER will help them to enhance their teaching performance (Performance Expectancy),the extent of perceived easiness associated with finding, customising, and using OER (Effort Expectancy) and the extent to which educators perceive how important the opinion of their peer educators if they adopt OER or not (Social Influence)have a statistically significant positive influence on the educators' Behavioural Intention to adopt and use OER. The extent to which an individual is satisfied with the institutional framework, policies and technical infrastructure to support the use of the innovation (Facilitating Conditions) did not yield a statistically significant influence on the Behavioural Intention and this was interpreted to mean Africa University educators are satisfied with the current resources and infrastructure in place. However educators felt Institutional Support in the form of institutional OER supportive policies, official OER project enactment, and OER related incentives needed attention. Also, significant differences were found in the barriers which potential users of OER identified as either limiting to potential use of OER, or negatively affecting their intention to use OER. These barriers include open licensing knowledge; institutional support; follow up training sessions; relevance, reliability and adaptability of OER. Addressing these factors could lead to a more widespread adoption of OER, at Africa University and help address the prevalent educational resource challenge.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/20062 Educators' challenges and behavioural intention to adopt open educational resources : the case of Africa University, Zimbabwe Kandiero, Agripah Hodgkinson-Williams, Cheryl Cox, Glenda Information and Communication Technologies in Education A review of the literature confirms that Open Educational Resources (OER) initiatives have created free, openly licenced and high quality educational resources for anyone to use. However, these free, openly licensed and high quality educational resources appear to remain largely unused by Africa University academics in the educationally resource-impoverished Zimbabwe. The objectives of this research study are to explore the challenges and enablers experienced by Africa University educators who may potentially adopt OER, and ascertain barriers preventing them from adopting OER in mainstream teaching. The sample consists of 45 full time educators from Africa University. Data was gathered by means of a survey questionnaire administered by the researcher. A modified version of the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) model developed by Venkatesh et al. (2003) was used. The UTAUT model was created from a fusion of eight diffusion of innovation models, and this gave it conceptual superiority over other candidate models. Key findings indicate that the extent to which educators believe that using OER will help them to enhance their teaching performance (Performance Expectancy),the extent of perceived easiness associated with finding, customising, and using OER (Effort Expectancy) and the extent to which educators perceive how important the opinion of their peer educators if they adopt OER or not (Social Influence)have a statistically significant positive influence on the educators' Behavioural Intention to adopt and use OER. The extent to which an individual is satisfied with the institutional framework, policies and technical infrastructure to support the use of the innovation (Facilitating Conditions) did not yield a statistically significant influence on the Behavioural Intention and this was interpreted to mean Africa University educators are satisfied with the current resources and infrastructure in place. However educators felt Institutional Support in the form of institutional OER supportive policies, official OER project enactment, and OER related incentives needed attention. Also, significant differences were found in the barriers which potential users of OER identified as either limiting to potential use of OER, or negatively affecting their intention to use OER. These barriers include open licensing knowledge; institutional support; follow up training sessions; relevance, reliability and adaptability of OER. Addressing these factors could lead to a more widespread adoption of OER, at Africa University and help address the prevalent educational resource challenge. 2016-06-21T09:25:44Z 2016-06-21T09:25:44Z 2015 Master Thesis Masters MEd http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20062 eng application/pdf School of Education Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Information and Communication Technologies in Education
Kandiero, Agripah
Educators' challenges and behavioural intention to adopt open educational resources : the case of Africa University, Zimbabwe
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Educators' challenges and behavioural intention to adopt open educational resources : the case of Africa University, Zimbabwe
title_full Educators' challenges and behavioural intention to adopt open educational resources : the case of Africa University, Zimbabwe
title_fullStr Educators' challenges and behavioural intention to adopt open educational resources : the case of Africa University, Zimbabwe
title_full_unstemmed Educators' challenges and behavioural intention to adopt open educational resources : the case of Africa University, Zimbabwe
title_short Educators' challenges and behavioural intention to adopt open educational resources : the case of Africa University, Zimbabwe
title_sort educators challenges and behavioural intention to adopt open educational resources the case of africa university zimbabwe
topic Information and Communication Technologies in Education
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20062
work_keys_str_mv AT kandieroagripah educatorschallengesandbehaviouralintentiontoadoptopeneducationalresourcesthecaseofafricauniversityzimbabwe