2016
DOI: 10.14742/ajet.2469
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Social media and their use in learning: A comparative analysis between Australia and Malaysia from the learners’ perspectives

Abstract: This study is an investigation into factors that encourage and/or inhibit the use of social media in the academic learning process between Australian and Malaysian students at higher learning institutions. Push-pull-mooring theory was used as a guide, resulting in seven independent variables (convenience, social influence, academic reasons, ease of use, social networking, barriers, and e-learning perception), and one dependent variable (teaching and learning benefit). The study included a survey of 524 respond… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…Findings from research on SNS use for language learning reveal that it promises a lot of benefits. Similar to findings on educational use of SNSs where ease of use, familiarity, convenience and flexibility offered by these services were often cited for students' use of SNSs for learning (Mazman & Usluel 2010;Tan & Low 2010;Balakrishnan, Teoh, Pourshafie & Liew 2017), language learners too valued these affordances (Lamy & Zourou 2013;McBride 2009). They also felt that SNSs like Facebook are easier to use in comparison to their university's own LMS, particularly when accessing content via mobile platforms (Gamble & Wilkins 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…Findings from research on SNS use for language learning reveal that it promises a lot of benefits. Similar to findings on educational use of SNSs where ease of use, familiarity, convenience and flexibility offered by these services were often cited for students' use of SNSs for learning (Mazman & Usluel 2010;Tan & Low 2010;Balakrishnan, Teoh, Pourshafie & Liew 2017), language learners too valued these affordances (Lamy & Zourou 2013;McBride 2009). They also felt that SNSs like Facebook are easier to use in comparison to their university's own LMS, particularly when accessing content via mobile platforms (Gamble & Wilkins 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…Through evaluation, TTF, instructor attitude, perceived usefulness, and perceived ease of use were regarded as two-level concepts that formed push effects. However, switching behaviorrelated literature has not investigated the concept of instructor attitude as an influencing push effect and has focused mostly on aspects of student learning (Balakrishnan et al, 2017;Liao et al, 2019). Discussing instructor attitude can further explain the effect of teaching interaction on understanding switching intention in the online teaching environment.…”
Section: Implications For Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In other words, will the trouble it takes to adopt new technologies result in more enrolments, a better quality experience, improved learning outcomes, and/or higher retention rates? (Balakrishnan, Teoh, Pourshafie, & Liew, 2017). Here, the politics and economics of mass education are clearly evident: increasing competition across the sector, growing levels of participation across the social strata, complex regulation, and measurement processes that track retention rates whilst simultaneously measuring standards.…”
Section: Debating the Use Of Social Media In He -Findingsmentioning
confidence: 99%