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Multivariate analysis of teachers’ digital information skills - The importance of available resources

Saikkonen Loretta; Kaarakainen Meri-Tuulia

Multivariate analysis of teachers’ digital information skills - The importance of available resources

Saikkonen Loretta
Kaarakainen Meri-Tuulia
Katso/Avaa
Multivariate analysis of teachers’ digital information skills - the importance of available resources.pdf (929.4Kb)
Lataukset: 

Elsevier
doi:10.1016/j.compedu.2021.104206
URI
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S036013152100083X
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042825521
Tiivistelmä



Digital information skills are prerequisites for success in
the information society. Previous research on 21st century skills has shown
that digital skills evolve sequentially, building on digital information
skills, making them the key to future skills that teachers should acquire and
be able to pass on to future generations. In the research on digital skills,
shortcomings of bivariate approaches have been widely identified and interest
has largely shifted to multivariate methods. However, the development of
effective targeted interventions still requires a deeper understanding of the
social resources of individuals and the interdependencies of predictors. This
study examined the extent to which sociodemographic factors and available
resources predict digital information skills and which subgroups emerge as
potential targets for interventions, by analysing the interdependence of the
predictor variables. The empirical data used in the study consisted of 4,988
Finnish teachers' questionnaire responses and performance test results.
Utilising the multiple regression analysis, the study found that digital
activity and age explain most of the variation in teachers’ digital information
skills. Their effect was found to be the inverse of each other, with abundant digital
activity increasing and age reducing teachers’ mastery of these skills. Digital
self-efficacy and in-service training also emerged as promising predictors,
highlighting that teachers' information skills are explained more strongly by
the available resources than by sociodemographic factors. At the end, the
practical significance and recommendations for more targeted interventions as
well as for further research are considered on the basis of the results
obtained.




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