Development and validation of an educational robot attitude scale (ERAS) for secondary school students

被引:21
作者
Sisman, Burak [1 ]
Gunay, Devrim [2 ]
Kucuk, Sevda [1 ]
机构
[1] Istanbul Univ, Hasan Ali Yucel Educ Fac, Comp Educ & Instruct Technol, TR-34452 Istanbul, Turkey
[2] Istanbul Univ, Hasan Ali Yucel Educ Fac, English Language Teaching, Istanbul, Turkey
关键词
Secondary education; robotics; humanoid robot; scale development; HUMANOID ROBOT; NEGATIVE ATTITUDES; USER ACCEPTANCE; CHILDREN; PRESCHOOL; ENGLISH; TECHNOLOGY; IMPACT; LEARN;
D O I
10.1080/10494820.2018.1474234
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Humanoid robots equipped with social skills have come to be used increasingly in the field of education across various subfields such as science education, special education, and foreign language education. In order to enhance the use of humanoid robots in educational settings, and to comprehensively evaluate its impact on the transformation of the class, understanding students' attitudes towards the use of robots for educational purposes plays a critical role. This paper outlines the implementation and validation procedures of an educational robot attitude scale (ERAS) developed to measure the attitudes of secondary school students towards the use of humanoid robots in educational settings. The sample of the study comprised of 232 secondary school students. The development and validation process consisted of exploratory factor analysis and convergent validity. The developed scale consists of 17 items and represents four factors of students' attitude: engagement, enjoyment, anxiety and intention. These four factors accounted for 66% of the total variance of the scale. Internal consistency coefficient for the whole scale was found .90 according to the reliability analysis. The results of the study suggest that the scale is a valid, reliable, and efficient tool for measuring the dimensions of students' attitudes towards humanoid robots in educational settings.
引用
收藏
页码:377 / 388
页数:12
相关论文
共 60 条
[1]   THE THEORY OF PLANNED BEHAVIOR [J].
AJZEN, I .
ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR AND HUMAN DECISION PROCESSES, 1991, 50 (02) :179-211
[2]   The Impact of Social Robotics on L2 Learners' Anxiety and Attitude in English Vocabulary Acquisition [J].
Alemi, M. ;
Meghdari, A. ;
Ghazisaedy, M. .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ROBOTICS, 2015, 7 (04) :523-535
[3]   The Effect of Applying Humanoid Robots as Teacher Assistants to Help Iranian Autistic Pupils Learn English as a Foreign Language [J].
Alemi, Minoo ;
Meghdari, Ali ;
Basiri, Nasim Mahboub ;
Taheri, Alireza .
SOCIAL ROBOTICS (ICSR 2015), 2015, 9388 :1-10
[4]   Employing Humanoid Robots for Teaching English Language in Iranian Junior High-Schools [J].
Alemi, Minoo ;
Meghdari, Ali ;
Ghazisaedy, Maryam .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HUMANOID ROBOTICS, 2014, 11 (03)
[5]   Creative and innovative e-learning using interactive storytelling [J].
Alsumait, Asmaa ;
Al-Musawi, Zahraa S. .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PERVASIVE COMPUTING AND COMMUNICATIONS, 2013, 9 (03) :209-+
[6]  
[Anonymous], 2006, CONFIRMATORY FACTOR
[7]   TOTAL PHYSICAL RESPONSE APPROACH TO 2ND LANGUAGE LEARNING [J].
ASHER, JJ .
MODERN LANGUAGE JOURNAL, 1969, 53 (01) :3-17
[8]  
Bartneck C., 2005, P HCI INT LAWR ERLB, DOI [10.13140/RG.2.2.35929.11367, DOI 10.13140/RG.2.2.35929.11367]
[9]   Students' perceptions about the use of video games in the classroom [J].
Bourgonjon, Jeroen ;
Valcke, Martin ;
Soetaert, Ronald ;
Schellens, Tammy .
COMPUTERS & EDUCATION, 2010, 54 (04) :1145-1156
[10]  
Chang CW, 2010, EDUC TECHNOL SOC, V13, P13