COMPARING TURKISH PRE-SERVICE STEM AND NON-STEM TEACHERS' ATTITUDES AND ANXIETY TOWARD ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE

Identifying student teachers’ attitudes and anxiety toward artificial intelligence (AI) in regard to their field of study might be helpful in determining whether and how AI will be employed in their future classrooms. Hence, this study aims to compare pre-service STEM and non-STEM teachers’ attitude...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Baltic science education 2024-01, Vol.23 (5), p.950-963
Hauptverfasser: Uyanik Aktulun, Ozgun, Kasapoglu, Koray, Aydogdu, Bulent
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Identifying student teachers’ attitudes and anxiety toward artificial intelligence (AI) in regard to their field of study might be helpful in determining whether and how AI will be employed in their future classrooms. Hence, this study aims to compare pre-service STEM and non-STEM teachers’ attitudes and anxiety toward AI. In this quantitative research, the causal-comparative research design was adopted. The study involved 520 pre-service teachers from a faculty of education at a public university in Türkiye. Among all, 51.5% were pre-service non-STEM teachers while 48.5% were pre-service STEM teachers. Data were collected through the Turkish versions of “the General Attitudes toward Artificial Intelligence Scale” and “the Artificial Intelligence Anxiety Scale”. Diagnostic analytics were performed, and descriptive statistics and MANOVA were performed to analyse the data. As a result, pre-service teachers, in general, were mostly positive about AI, but undecided to be anxious about AI. STEM student teachers had more positive attitudes toward AI than non-STEM student teachers, and non-STEM student teachers were more anxious toward AI than STEM student teachers. The results imply that non-STEM teacher education curricula should be redesigned to be AI-integrated to better prepare teachers of the future as teachers with TPACK integrated with AI. Keywords: artificial intelligence, anxiety toward artificial intelligence, attitude toward artificial intelligence, pre-service STEM teacher, pre-service non-STEM teacher, pre-service teacher
ISSN:1648-3898
2538-7138
DOI:10.33225/jbse/24.23.950