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008 231106b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
022 _a0007-0998
037 _bRIEBPL Library
082 _a370.1505
100 _aYamei Zhang et al...
245 _a Teaching presence predicts cyberloafing during online learning: From the perspective of the community of inquiry framework and social learning theory
_b(Journal Article)
260 _aUK
_b: Wiley and sons
_c,December 2022
300 _a1651-1666 p.
490 _aBritish Journal of Educational Psychology,Volume92, Issue4
505 _a***______{For Hard Copy, Please visit Library.}________***
520 _aAbstract- Background Cyberloafing exists extensively in online learning and impairs learning, yet little is known about how course-related factors affect it. The community of inquiry framework maintains that learning is affected by teaching presence, according to which, we assume that teaching presence impacts cyberloafing, which is mediated by social presence, cognitive presence, and lack of attention, and moderated by normative influence. Aims This study examined the effect of teaching presence on cyberloafing and its underlying mechanisms – the mediating roles of social presence, cognitive presence and lack of attention, and the moderating roles of normative influence. Sample Participants were 814 university students who were taking video-centric asynchronous online courses. Methods Self-report instruments were adopted, and data were analysed using structural equation modelling. Results Teaching presence was negatively associated with cyberloafing. Social presence (positively), cognitive presence (negatively), and lack of attention (negatively) mediated the relation, respectively. Social presence, cognitive presence and lack of attention were also serial mediators of the association (i.e., teaching presence → social presence → cognitive presence → cyberloafing; teaching presence → cognitive presence → lack of attention → cyberloafing; teaching presence → social presence → cognitive presence → lack of attention → cyberloafing), and these sequential mediating effects were negative. Moreover, normative influence could aggravate the negative effect of cognitive presence on lack of attention, the positive effect of social presence on cyberloafing, and the positive effect of lack of attention on cyberloafing. Conclusions Theoretical and practical implications of the findings for learning and teaching are discussed.
650 _acognitive presence
650 _acyberloafing lack of attention
650 _a normative influence
650 _asocial presence
650 _ateaching presence
856 _uhttps://bpspsychub.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/bjep.12531
942 _cPER
999 _c44765
_d44764