Problem Statement: The educational technology standards for teachers set
by the International Society for Technology in Education (the ISTE
Standards-T) represent an important framework for using technology
effectively in teaching and learning processes. These standards are widely
used by universities, educational institutions, and schools. The
contemporary ISTE standards for teachers proposed in 2008 have five
dimensions. The standards created a vision for the educational technology
field, so it is important that how prospective teachers or in-service teachers
meet these standards is measured with valid and reliable instruments.
Purpose of the Study: The purpose of this study was to develop and validate
the education technology standards self-efficacy (ETSSE) scale, which is
based on the ISTE Standards-T.
Method: Confirmatory factor analyses (CFA) were conducted in order to
determine the factor structure of the scale. The scale items were
constructed based on the ISTE Standards-T and performance indicators.
To define the content validity values of the scale items, the researchers
asked the opinions of 12 specialists. The data was collected from
prospective teachers (CFA1 group, n=473) and teachers (CFA2 group,
n=394). Owing to the theoretical structure of the standards being defined
by ISTE, both first order and second order confirmatory factor analyses were applied to the datasets of the two groups separately and without exploratory factor analysis.
Findings: The ETSSE scale was validated in five dimensions as ISTE Standards-T 2008 identified. According to the results of the first order and second order confirmatory factor analyses (CFAs) of the two different groups, the scale is considered reliable (CFA1 1st order [χ2 (734, n= 473)= 1857.23, p< .001, RMSEA=.057, SRMR=.053, NFI= .95, NNFI=.97, CFI=.97, IFI=.97]; CFA2 1st order [χ2 (727, n= 394)= 1886.31, p< .001, RMSEA=.064, SRMR=.056, NFI = .95, NNFI=.97, CFI=.97, IFI=.97]). Concurrent validity results showed a positive and significant correlation between the two scales .83 (p<.01). Cronbach’s Alpha was at .95 and McDonald’s Omega was .96. The item analyses showed that each item correlated with the overall score from the scale both for prospective teachers and teachers (Corrected Item-Total Correlation >.30). Independent group t-tests for the 27% upper and 27% lower groups in the five sub-factors showed significant difference (p<.01).
Conclusion and Recommendations: The research results have demonstrated that the developed ETSSE scale consisting of 40 items and five subscales is valid and reliable for both teachers and prospective teachers.
Keywords: Education technology standards, ISTE standards, scale development, confirmatory factor analysis
Journal Section | Articles |
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Authors | |
Publication Date | April 15, 2016 |
Published in Issue | Year 2016 Volume: 16 Issue: 63 |