How do gender, Internet activity and learning beliefs predict sixth-grade students’ self-efficacy beliefs in and attitudes towards online inquiry?

Today’s students search, evaluate and actively use Web information in their school assignments, that is, they conduct an online inquiry. This current survey study addresses sixth-grade students’ self-efficacy beliefs in and attitudes towards online inquiry, and to what extent free-time and school-re...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of information science 2023-10, Vol.49 (5), p.1246-1261
Hauptverfasser: Sormunen, Eero, Erdmann, Norbert, Otieno, Suzanne CSA, Mikkilä-Erdmann, Mirjamaija, Laakkonen, Eero, Mikkonen, Teemu, Hossain, Md Arman, González-Ibáñez, Roberto, Quintanilla-Gatica, Mario, Leppänen, Paavo HT, Vauras, Marja
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Today’s students search, evaluate and actively use Web information in their school assignments, that is, they conduct an online inquiry. This current survey study addresses sixth-grade students’ self-efficacy beliefs in and attitudes towards online inquiry, and to what extent free-time and school-related Internet activity, gender and learning beliefs explain these. The questionnaire was administered in 10 schools to 340 sixth-graders in Finland. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses revealed three elements of self-efficacy beliefs: self-efficacy in Web searching, the evaluation of sources and synthesising information. Furthermore, attitudes towards online inquiry loaded into two factors: a positive and a negative attitude towards online inquiry. A structural equation model was used to analyse the effects of the explanatory variables on the factors. The results of this work suggest that gender and free-time Internet use predict most sixth-graders’ self-efficacy beliefs in and attitudes towards online inquiry.
ISSN:0165-5515
1741-6485
DOI:10.1177/01655515211043708