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Woodrow, Janice E. J. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1994
Describes results of a study that investigated development of attitudes toward computer utilization over time of a group of secondary school students from grade 8 to grade 11. Tests indicated that gains in attitudes were independent of gender, computer training, and computer course achievement. (Author/JKP)
Descriptors: Computer Attitudes, Computer Literacy, Gender Issues, Secondary Education

Shashaani, Lily – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1994
This study of 902 boys and 828 girls in secondary school shows that gender differences in computer experience have a direct relationship to computer attitudes. Data gathered support the hypothesis that male students have more computer experience than female students and found boys showed more positive attitudes toward computers than girls. (64…
Descriptors: Computer Attitudes, Computer Literacy, Gender Issues, Secondary Education

Schott, Gareth; Selwyn, Neil – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2000
Reports on a study of secondary students in the United Kingdom that examined the gender and social competency of frequent and infrequent computer users. Results suggest that frequent users are just as likely to be female and no less sociable, contrary to persistent stereotyping of computer users as antisocial males. (Author/LRW)
Descriptors: Computer Use, Foreign Countries, Gender Issues, Interpersonal Competence

Suomala, Jyrki; Alajaaski, Jarkko – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2002
Describes a study that examined fifth-grade Finnish pupils' problem-solving processes in a LEGO/Logo technology-based learning environment. Results indicate that learning model and gender account for group differences in problem solving processes, and are interpreted as supporting the validity of discovery learning. (Author/LRW)
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Discovery Learning, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries

Yaghi, Hussein M. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1997
A study of 644 Lebanese students (grades 6-12) investigated computer attitudes (including the effect of gender and home ownership of computers) using the Bath County Computer Attitudes Scale. Reports on the reliability and factor analysis of the scale and compares findings with studies conducted in other countries using the same scale. (PEN)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Computer Attitudes, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries

Mitra, Ananda; LaFrance, Betty; McCullough, Sandra – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2001
This longitudinal study examines the gender differences in attitudes toward computerization at a liberal arts university. Discusses gender effects research in computer use; diffusion of innovations; innovation adoption; and gender effects on innovation adoption. Results show women are more cautious in their interpretation of technological…
Descriptors: Adoption (Ideas), Computer Attitudes, Gender Issues, Higher Education

Mitra, Ananda; Lenzmeier, Stefne; Steffensmeier, Timothy; Avon, Rachel; Qu, Nancy; Hazen, Mike – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2000
Explores the nature of the relationships between gender, categories of computer use, and attitudes toward computers in a computer-enriched university environment where students had network access and laptop computers over a four-year period. Results indicate women were less positive about computers than men and their use levels were less frequent.…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Attitudes, Computer Networks, Females

Shuell, Thomas J.; Farber, Stacey L. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2001
Describes a study that explored college students' perceptions of computer-based technology in a variety of academic disciplines and their perceptions of the effects this technology had on their learning. Topics include students' general perceptions of technology and learning; technology use in lectures; communications technology; and gender…
Descriptors: College Students, Computer Assisted Instruction, Gender Issues, Higher Education

Dryburgh, Heather – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2000
Discusses the decline in the number of female computer science graduates and presents a categorization by educational stages of the research into this decline as well as an evaluation of the generalizability of findings to broader contexts. Show that the most extensive research is done at the post-secondary stage. (Contains 53 references.)…
Descriptors: Classification, Computer Science Education, Females, Gender Issues

Cassidy, Simon; Eachus, Peter – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2002
Describes the development and validation of the 30-item Computer User Self-Efficacy (CUSE) Scale, a copy of which is appended. Topics include social cognitive theory; experience and computer self-efficacy; gender differences; and the measurement of computer self-efficacy in student computer users and its relevance to learning in higher education.…
Descriptors: Computers, Gender Issues, Higher Education, Measures (Individuals)

Rahim, Md. Mahbubur; Seyal, Afzaal H.; Rahman, Mohd. Noah Abd. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2001
Discusses softlifting as a form of software piracy and describes a study that analyzed the softlifting intentions of computing students in Brunei Darussalam. Considers student attitudes; gender; family income; personal computer ownership; experience; faculty remarks; institutional monitoring; and implications for attempts to curb software piracy.…
Descriptors: Computer Science Education, Family Income, Foreign Countries, Gender Issues

Lim, Kee-Sook – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2002
Describes a study that evaluated the effects of computer experience, gender, and academic performance on computer attitude and user information system satisfaction in a university setting. Results of an analysis of variance showed that the personal characteristics made a difference in computer attitudes but not in academic computer system user…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Analysis of Variance, Computer Attitudes, Gender Issues

Taylor, Harriet G.; Mounfield, Luegina C. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1994
Presents research conducted with a group of non-computer science majors to determine the effects of prior computing experience on success in college computer science courses. Specific relationships between prior experience factors and gender were studied, and the results indicate that pre-college computing can have an important role in achieving…
Descriptors: College Students, Computer Attitudes, Computer Literacy, Computer Science

Shermis, Mark D.; Mzumara, Howard R.; Bublitz, Scott T. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2001
This study of undergraduates examined differences between computer adaptive testing (CAT) and self-adaptive testing (SAT), including feedback conditions and gender differences. Results of the Test Anxiety Inventory, Computer Anxiety Rating Scale, and a Student Attitude Questionnaire showed measurement efficiency is differentially affected by test…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Computer Anxiety, Computer Assisted Testing, Gender Issues

Burnam, Bruce; Kafai, Yasmin B. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2001
Describes a study of third and fifth grade students that investigated moral dilemmas involving computer and Internet use. Significant differences were found between children's moral reasoning in everyday situations compared to those involving computer and Internet use, but gender differences were not consistently detected. (Author/LRW)
Descriptors: Child Development, Computer Uses in Education, Elementary Education, Ethics