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Item Databases and Student Learning: A Multilevel Analysis of the Use of Databases in the Classroom(1998-08-01) Beamish, PeterThis study investigated the use of computerised databases to enhance student learning in the secondary school classroom, and included student factors and classroom processes that influenced their success. Students worked through a course in which they used computers and database management software to solve problems requiring them to work with information. Based on a constructivist pedagogy the course aimed to help students construct knowledge, develop skills in information processing, develop higher order thinking skills, and develop positive attitudes to computers.
Data were collected from 541 students in 25 classrooms at 12 schools in New South wales using a series of tests, questionnaires and classroom variables. Multilevel regression analysis was used to test hypothesized causal model linking presage, process and product variables.
Students successfully learned to use databases during the course, acquiring content knowledge of the databases and increasing their information processing skills. Students reported positive attitudes to computers and these attitudes directly influenced their achievement. The latter served to emphasise the importance of developing appropriate attitudes in computer classroom learning activities.
A number of other factors were found to influence the success of database activities. Gender and student approaches to learning influenced both cognitive and attitudinal outcomes directly. Students' previous computer experiences were found to influence approaches to learning, information processing ability, and attitudes to computers.
Several classroom contextual variables were also found to be important, including peer interaction, time on task and the type of database software used. Other teaching methods were of interest because of their negative or lack of influence on learning outcomes. The use of a heuristic was found to have a negative effect, while direct instruction of strategies and teacher modelling of strategies failed to affect learning outcomes.
Overall, most students used databases to collect and analyse data successfully. Most teachers were pleasantly surprised at the level of work completed by their students during the database course.
Item Student Attitudes to Computers in the Classroom(1988-01-01) Beamish, PeterStudent attitudes toward computers are important to the success of the many computer-assisted programs that are currently being run in Australian schools. This study of 379 Year 10 students examined the effects of age, sex, personality, previous computer use (home, school, and other), attitudes to school subjects (English, Mathematics and Science), attitudes to teachers, and attitudes to technology on students' attitudes to computers (computer liking, and computer confidence).
Previous computer use and attitudes to technology were found to be significantly related to more positive attitudes on each of the two computer scales. Attitudes to science was found significantly related to computer confidence. Sex, age, and personality, were found to indirectly affect students' attitudes to confidence. No relationship was found between students' attitudes to teachers and their attitudes to computers.