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First year university students' self-perception of ICT skills: Do learning styles matter?
Posted on 14 April 2011 by Shahril Effendi Bin Ibrahim (Senior Librarian)
Authorship Details
Jef C. Verhoeven
Dirk Heerwegh
Kurt De Wit
Publication Details
Resource Type: 
Article
Publication Date: 
Jan 2011
Publication Title: 
Education and Information Technologies
Summary

Do ICT skills of freshmen change in 6 months at the university? What is the contribution of learning styles (or patterns) to the explanation of the variance in self-perceived ICT skills and the possible change in these skills? And what is the contribution of learning styles and of gender, social class, and ICT course attendance to the explanation of the variance in these skills? To answer these questions, data were collected in a panel research project that recruited 714 freshmen at a large Belgian university. The data show that the ability of the students to maintain a computer and to develop a website improves at the university but not the ability to use the Internet or to apply basic ICT skills. The analyses show that there is a link, albeit weak, between learning styles and self-perceived ICT skills. Learning styles can partially explain differences between groups of students with different characteristics. The data show that having a certain learning style might influence the perception of students of their ICT skill, but learning styles do not allow one to predict the change in the self-perceived ICT skills of the students.

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