Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/10071
Title: Blended learning or face-to-face? Does Tutor anxiety prevent the adoption of Learning Management Systems for distance education in Ghana?
Authors: Bervell, Brandford
Umar, Irfan Naufal
Keywords: Blended learning
LMS
usage
anxiety
tutors
distance education
Issue Date: 2020
Publisher: Open Learning: The Journal of Open, Distance and e- Learning
Abstract: Learning Management System (LMS)-enabled blended learning has been adopted by higher educational institutions for promoting accessible and effective pedagogy and andragogical practices. The introduction of this mode of learning has altered the traditional faceto- face interaction. However, the lack of actual usage and online presence by instructors in an LMS-enabled blended learning environment seems to be a major setback for its success. Consequently, LMS-related anxiety has been cited as one of the behavioural challenges hindering its usage in Africa. Hence, this paper is focused on unravelling the antecedents of tutors’ anxiety towards actual LMS usage based on a Technology Related Stimulus-Response Theoretical Framework (TR-SR-TF). In view of this, the study employed a survey design, adopting a questionnaire as data collection instrument from 267 distance education tutors across study centres within Ghana. The results fromPartial Least Squares Structural Equation Modelling (PLSSEM) technique revealed three underlying factors determining LMS anxiety, namely; colleague influence, outcome expectation and use support. However, the result of the Importance Performance Map Analysis (IPMA) showed that colleague influencewas themost important indicator while outcome expectation was the highest performance indicator of tutors’ LMS related anxiety. The study recommended that such factors like colleague influence, outcome expectation and use support should be consciously addressed in order to reduce (if not totally eliminate) anxiety towards LMS use for blended learning.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/10071
ISSN: 1469-9958
Appears in Collections:Department of Education



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