School teachers’ digital selfefficacy in Japan and Sweden. A study of the importance of digital self-efficacy and relevant constraining factors.
Abstract
Aim: The thesis examines associations between teachers’ self-efficacy in teaching using
ICT (information and communications technology) and actual ICT usage in classroom
teaching, also controlling for the availability of various resources in the form of
teacher and school characteristics, in Japan and Sweden, two countries with
contrasting situations regarding ICT usage in school education.
Theory: Past studies have shown that the availability of ICT infrastructure does not always
coincide with ICT classroom use. Drawing on this, special attention is paid to how
teachers’ self-confidence or self-efficacy in digital teaching may influence their
teaching behaviour.
Method: I analyse data from the most recent TALIS in 2018, collected from teachers and
principals in the two countries. This is done by performing ordered logistic
regressions for the Swedish and Japanese datasets to see how the different variables
are associated with “Classroom ICT use”.
Results: The results show that digital self-efficacy has a very high, statistically significant
correlation in both countries, which confirms previous findings in the literature. But
the data also reveal differences. For example, school infrastructure and gender seem
correlated to ICT use in Sweden but not in Japan. At the same time, lack of ICT
elements in professional development appears to be negatively correlated with ICT
use in both countries. Conversely, age does not seem to be correlated with ICT use in
either country.
Degree
Student Essay
Collections
Date
2024-05-06Author
Ohagi, Asuka
Keywords
digital self-efficacy
school teachers
ICT
Japan
Sweden
Language
eng