Technological, pedagogical, content knowledge (TPACK): an exploratory study of adjunct faculty technology proficiency

Doctor of Philosophy === Department of Educational Leadership === Royce Ann Collins === In an era of increasing demand for a limited budget, more universities are turning to adjunct faculty to fill the need and to address the student load. Adjunct faculty members are hired for their content knowledg...

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Main Author: Knolton, Davin V.
Language:en_US
Published: Kansas State University 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/18695
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spelling ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-186952016-03-01T03:52:21Z Technological, pedagogical, content knowledge (TPACK): an exploratory study of adjunct faculty technology proficiency Knolton, Davin V. Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPACK) Technology integration Pedagogy Methods Adjunct faculty Adult Education (0516) Doctor of Philosophy Department of Educational Leadership Royce Ann Collins In an era of increasing demand for a limited budget, more universities are turning to adjunct faculty to fill the need and to address the student load. Adjunct faculty members are hired for their content knowledge and close association to the business world and industry. This study was conducted to investigate whether a relationship exists between (a) technological pedagogical content knowledge (TPACK); (b) pedagogical training; and (c) personal technology; and to determine which variables have the greatest influence in the willingness of adjunct faculty at a Midwestern higher education institution to choose and integrate digital technology into curriculum and expand to the discussion of TPACK into graduate level education. TPACK is both a framework and an instrument to measure the level of integration of the primary components of the TPACK framework. TPACK is a term that describes what a teacher must know to integrate technology effectively into curriculum or teacher practices and represents the combination of teacher content knowledge, pedagogical knowledge and technology knowledge as interrelated. TPACK allows educators to consider what knowledge is required to integrate technology into teaching and how they might develop that knowledge within themselves. The study was conducted with a sample (n=30) of adjunct faculty members from two extension campuses from a Midwestern, Tier 1 university. The data revealed significant relationships between pedagogical training and selection of appropriate technology, and between personal technology use and selection of appropriate technology. The data also revealed that TPACK was a significant predictor; however, the subdomains of TPACK masked the true impact because of the high presence of covariance. 2014-11-19T22:22:18Z 2014-11-19T22:22:18Z 2014-11-19 2014 December Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2097/18695 en_US Kansas State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPACK)
Technology integration
Pedagogy
Methods
Adjunct faculty
Adult Education (0516)
spellingShingle Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPACK)
Technology integration
Pedagogy
Methods
Adjunct faculty
Adult Education (0516)
Knolton, Davin V.
Technological, pedagogical, content knowledge (TPACK): an exploratory study of adjunct faculty technology proficiency
description Doctor of Philosophy === Department of Educational Leadership === Royce Ann Collins === In an era of increasing demand for a limited budget, more universities are turning to adjunct faculty to fill the need and to address the student load. Adjunct faculty members are hired for their content knowledge and close association to the business world and industry. This study was conducted to investigate whether a relationship exists between (a) technological pedagogical content knowledge (TPACK); (b) pedagogical training; and (c) personal technology; and to determine which variables have the greatest influence in the willingness of adjunct faculty at a Midwestern higher education institution to choose and integrate digital technology into curriculum and expand to the discussion of TPACK into graduate level education. TPACK is both a framework and an instrument to measure the level of integration of the primary components of the TPACK framework. TPACK is a term that describes what a teacher must know to integrate technology effectively into curriculum or teacher practices and represents the combination of teacher content knowledge, pedagogical knowledge and technology knowledge as interrelated. TPACK allows educators to consider what knowledge is required to integrate technology into teaching and how they might develop that knowledge within themselves. The study was conducted with a sample (n=30) of adjunct faculty members from two extension campuses from a Midwestern, Tier 1 university. The data revealed significant relationships between pedagogical training and selection of appropriate technology, and between personal technology use and selection of appropriate technology. The data also revealed that TPACK was a significant predictor; however, the subdomains of TPACK masked the true impact because of the high presence of covariance.
author Knolton, Davin V.
author_facet Knolton, Davin V.
author_sort Knolton, Davin V.
title Technological, pedagogical, content knowledge (TPACK): an exploratory study of adjunct faculty technology proficiency
title_short Technological, pedagogical, content knowledge (TPACK): an exploratory study of adjunct faculty technology proficiency
title_full Technological, pedagogical, content knowledge (TPACK): an exploratory study of adjunct faculty technology proficiency
title_fullStr Technological, pedagogical, content knowledge (TPACK): an exploratory study of adjunct faculty technology proficiency
title_full_unstemmed Technological, pedagogical, content knowledge (TPACK): an exploratory study of adjunct faculty technology proficiency
title_sort technological, pedagogical, content knowledge (tpack): an exploratory study of adjunct faculty technology proficiency
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/18695
work_keys_str_mv AT knoltondavinv technologicalpedagogicalcontentknowledgetpackanexploratorystudyofadjunctfacultytechnologyproficiency
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