Title: Measuring preservice teacher self-efficacy of technology integration
1Measuring preservice teacher self-efficacy of
technology integration
- Jeremy Browne
- Department of Instructional Psychology
Technology - Brigham Young University
- United States
- browne_at_byu.edu
2IPT 286 / 287
- Technology Integration
- Not a computer course
- Required for all preservice teachers
- 286 Secondary education
- 287 Elementary, Early Childhood, Special
Education - Aligned with ISTEs NETS-T
3Fostering Technology Integration
Skills Knowledge
National EducationalTechnology Standards
EffectiveIn-PracticeTechnologyIntegration
Can / Cant
Will / Wont
Dispositions
Confidence
Perceived Value
4Why Self-Efficacy?
- More clearly defined than Confidence
- Well established measurement methodology
- Significant predictor of many in-practice
behaviors
51. Self-Efficacy Defined
- Self-efficacy is a personal belief about ones
own ability to perform a given action. (Bandura,
1997 Denzine et al., 2005) - Not to be confused with Teacher Efficacy
(Tschannen-Moran et al., 1998)
62. Self-Efficacy Measures
73. Predictive Power
- Job-search self-efficacy was a significant
predictor of interviews, offers, employment
status, and PJ Person-Job fit perceptions
(Saks, 2006). - Perceived math self-efficacy predicted interest
in the subject (Özyürek, 2005). - Data analysis indicated that perceived
self-efficacy was a significant predictor of new
in-practice teacher performance (Jablonski,
1995).
83. Predictive Power
- Among the six subscales of empowerment,
professional growth, status and self-efficacy
were significant predictors of organizational and
PC professional commitment (Bogler Somech,
2004). - The perceived self-efficacy and context beliefs
of teachers regarding the use of computer
technology correlated significantly with reported
hours of in-class use of technology (Whitehead,
2002).
9Self-efficacy Mediated
- It does mediate distressing events.
- Chwalisz et al., 1992
- High self-efficacy Problem-focused coping
- Low self-efficacy Emotion-focused coping
- EFC, not PFC, was associated with higher levels
of burnout of in-practice teachers.
10Literature Review
- Dont reinvent the wheel.
- (Find an existing measure.)
- Dont reuse a flat tire.
- MUTEBI (Enoch et al., 1993)
- Findings We needed to create our own measure.
- The Technology Integration Confidence Scale
(TICS).
11TICS Item Development
- Begin with NETS-T
- Write 4-7 tasks for each
- Review by faculty students
- Pen paper comments
- Return to step 2
12Important Deviations
13TICS v1
- 28-item TICS
- Web-based
- 52 Spring-term preservice teachers
- Administered at end of term
- Described in proceedings
14TICS v2
- 33 Items
- Expanded coverage of specific NETS-T
- Targeted item revision (e.g. Item 13)
- Larger sample (200)Pre- and post-course
administration - New General Self-efficacy Scale (NGSE Chen et
al., 2001) administered concurrently
15Results Item Analysis (pretest)
- Improvement from TICS v1
- Lower means (10 items gt 4.0)
- Higher variances (0 items lt .5)
- Well represented NETS-T
16Results Reliability Analysis (Pretest)
Projected number of items required for Projected number of items required for
NETS-T N of items Alpha a .80 a .90
I.A 233 6 .84 5 11
I.B 238 2 .80 2 5
II 235 7 .90 4 7
III 231 5 .88 3 7
IV 234 4 .82 4 9
V 234 5 .83 5 10
VI 234 4 .86 3 6
17Results Factor Analysis (pretest)
of variance explained by of variance explained by
NETS-T of items Factor 1 Factor 2
I.A 6 57.7 --
I.B 2 84.1 --
II 7 63.8 --
III 5 68.7 --
IV 4 65.6 --
V 5 61.0 --
VI 4 70.7 --
18RSM (Functional)
Strongly agree
Strongly disagree
Disagree
Agree
Neutral
19RSM (Functional)
Strongly agree
Strongly disagree
Disagree
Agree
Neutral
20RSM (Functioning)
Strongly agree
Strongly disagree
Disagree
Agree
Neutral
21RSM (Malfunctioning)
Strongly agree
Strongly disagree
Disagree
Neutral
Agree
22NGSE
23NETS-T I.A (pre post)
24NETS-T I.B (pre post)
25NETS-T II (pre post)
26NETS-T III (pre post)
27NETS-T IV (pre post)
28NETS-T V (pre post)
29NETS-T VI (pre post)
30Evidence of Validity
31TICS v1 Construct Validity
Results of Item-Domain Congruence Survey.
Number and percent of judges who classified each item on the intended subscale Number and percent of judges who classified each item on the intended subscale
NETS-T Item number Number Percent
II 11 2 40
II 15 2 40
II 25 3 60
II 26 0 0
II 28 1 20
III 9 1 20
III 10 2 40
V 13 2 40
V 16 1 20
32TICS v1 Content Validity
Item Relevancy Sores (Aikens V index).
Number of judges that classified this item as Number of judges that classified this item as Number of judges that classified this item as Number of judges that classified this item as
Subscale Item number Relevant Somewhat relevant Somewhat irrelevant Irrelevant Aikens V index
II 28 3 0 2 0 .730
III 10 2 3 0 0 .800
IV 27 2 1 2 0 .670
VI 20 2 2 1 0 .730
33Anachronistic View of Validity
- The Holy Trinity (Guion, 1980)
- Content Validity
- Construct Validity
- Criterion Validity
- Convergent Validity
- Discriminate Validity
- Others
- Consequential Validities
- Face Validity
- Etc.
34Modern View of Validity
- There is no validity but construct validity.
- Messick 1995 AERA, APA, NCME, 1999
- Validities reassigned as sources of
validity-supporting evidence.
35Validity
- is a property of your interpretation of the test
data (not of the test or the data). - is an evaluative judgment of the soundness of
your interpretations and uses of students
assessment results(Nitko Brookhart, 2006) - changes based on purpose.
36Applying Modern Validity Theoryto the TICS
- Intended Purposes
- Establish a baseline preservice teacher profile
- Monitor the effects of curricular adjustments
- Identify preservice teachers in most need of
intervention - Predict in-practice technology integration
371. Establish a baseline preservice teacher profile
- Assumes the TICS functions well psychometrically.
- Internal structure analysis
- Expert reviews
- Low of correlation with NGSE
- ( lt .28 or 8 variance explained)
382. Monitor the effects of curricular adjustments
- Assumes the TICS is sensitive to changes in
self-efficacy. - Pre-Post analysis
- Comparisons of scores between IPT 286 and 287
393. Identify preservice teachers in most need of
intervention
- Assumes TICS can predict in-classperformance.
- RSM information analysis
- Regression analysis
- X
- Pre-course TICS scores
- Relevant demographics
- Y
- In-class performance indicators (assignment /
assessment scores)
404. Predict in-practice technology integration
- 5-year longitudinal, mixed methods study
414. Predict in-practice technology integration
- Review of self-efficacy literature
42Future Directions
- TICS v2 showing promise
- Expanded use
- Inform NETS-T refreshing
- Modern validity theory can be applied
systematically.