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Focusing on SMTEs: Using Audience Response Technology to Refine a Research Project




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Mentoring Doctoral Students in a Developing Society




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Efforts to Reverse the Trend of Enrollment Decline in Computer Science Programs




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The Adoption of Single Sign-On and Multifactor Authentication in Organisations: A Critical Evaluation Using TOE Framework




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IT Service and Support: What To Do With Geographically Distributed Teams?




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Using a Learning Management System to Foster Independent Learning in an Outcome-Based University: A Gulf Perspective




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Extending Learning to Interacting with Multiple Participants in Multiple Web 2.0 Learning Communities




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A Collaborative Writing Approach to Wikis: Design, Implementation, and Evaluation




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Library Web/Online Information Services to the Needs and Behavior of Students




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Highs and Lows of Organizational Decision Making and the Relationship to Collaboration and Technology Tools




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Integrating IT Skills into a Business School’s Programmes




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Responding to the Employability Challenge: Final Projects for IT-based Organizational Training




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Making a Case for Change Management Theory to Support IS/IT Curriculum Innovation




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Building Computer Games as Effective Learning Tools for Digital Natives – and Similars




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A Research Study for the Development of a SOA Middleware Prototype that used Web Services to Bridge the LMS to LOR Data Movement Interoperability Gap for Education




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Guide to ISO 27001: UAE Case Study




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Modeling, Training, and Mentoring Teacher Candidates to Use SMART Board Technology




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Facilitating Linguistic Integration of Immigrants: An Overview of ICT Tools




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The Evolution of Digital Technologies – from Collaboration to eCollaboration – and the Tools which assist eCollaboration




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Student Attitudes Towards E-Learning: The First Year Accounting Experience




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A Comparison Study of Impact Factor in Web of Science and Scopus Databases for Engineering Education and Educational Technology Journals




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An Innovative Marketing Strategy to Promote our College of IT: Zayed University Case Study




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Curriculum Construction and Custom Publishing – An Academic Perspective




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Teaching Undergraduate Software Engineering Using Open Source Development Tools




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Systemic Approach to e-Skilling in South Africa




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Measuring up to ICT Teaching and Learning Standards




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Towards a Method for Mobile Learning Design




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Transitioning from Data Storage to Data Curation: The Challenges Facing an Archaeological Institution




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Challenges in Adopting Open Innovation Strategies in SMEs: An Exploratory Study in Portugal




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Multi-Agent Framework for Social Customer Relationship Management Systems




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Applying a Modified Technology Acceptance Model to Qualitatively Analyse the Factors Affecting E-Portfolio Implementation for Student Teachers’ in Field Experience Placements




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Practicing M-Application Services Opportunities with Special Reference to Oman




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Investigating Ways to Use Facebook at the University Level: A Delphi Study




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A Guide to Educating Different Generations in South Africa




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Web-based Tutorials and Traditional Face-to-Face Lectures: A Comparative Analysis of Student Performance




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Exploring the Addition of Mobile Access to a Healthcare Services Website




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Planning an Iron Ore Mine: From Exploration Data to Informed Mining Decisions




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InkBlog: A Pen-Based Blog Tool for e-Learning Environments




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Models to Inform Capstone Program Development




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A Framework for Using Questions as Meta-tags to Enhance Knowledge Support Services as Part of a Living Lab Environment




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A Collaborative Framework for a Cross-Institutional Assessment to Shape Future IT Professionals




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Analysis of Student Attitudes towards E-learning: The Case of Engineering Students in Libya




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An Overview of Information Tools and Technologies for Competitive Intelligence Building: Theoretical Approach




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Critical Design Factors of Developing a High-quality Educational Website: Perspectives of Pre-service Teachers




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To Social Login or not Login? Exploring Factors Affecting the Decision




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Learning and Assessment Practices of Doctoral Studies of Developing and Developed Countries: A Case Study of Doctoral Studies in Bangladesh




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Can E-Portfolio Improve Students’ Readiness to Find an IT Career?

An E-Portfolio Assessment Management System (EAMS) can be an innovative tool that provides students with flexible opportunities to demonstrate the acquisition of skills and abilities in an outcome-based institution. The system has been developed and used for the past ten years to create, reflect, revise, and structure students’ work. It is a repository management system that facilitates collecting, sharing, and presenting artifacts of student learning outcomes via a digital medium. Therefore, it provides students with flexible opportunities to demonstrate the acquisition of skills and abilities to demonstrate growth of achieving learning outcomes. The rationale of the EAMS is to allow students to demonstrate competences and reflect upon experiences to improve their learning and career readiness; hence, they are accountable for their learning. The system was built around two defined set of learning outcomes: institutionally agreed upon set of learning outcomes, and learning objectives that are related to major requirements. The purpose of this study is to analyze students’ perceptions and attitudes when using an e-portfolio to support their employment opportunities. The participants were 217 students in the College of Technological Innovation. The students reported that the developing of e-portfolios was extremely helpful. The results showed that students have positive opinions about using e-portfolios as a beneficial tool to support their readiness for employment; they believe an e-portfolio increases their confidence to find a job in the IT field because it can allow them to showcase artifacts that demonstrate competencies and reflect upon experiences, and they can provide their supervisors during their industrial training with an e-resume that includes views of their actual work of what they have learned and are able to do when they complete their degree. Employers then can review e-portfolios to select prospective employees work readiness skills; hence, graduates are more likely to obtain a job in their workplaces. In conclusion, students do like the idea of e-portfolios when it is presented to them as a career showcase rather than a process for documenting learning. A career center can use e-portfolios as a tool to help students find a job. Furthermore, our analysis and evaluation uncovered learning issues involved in moving from the traditional approach of learning toward an integrated learning system that can be used after graduation.




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Impact of a Cross-Institutional Assessment Designed to Shape Future IT Professionals

IT graduates need a suite of technical competencies and soft skills married with an understanding of the social and business contexts of the systems that they build. To instill in students an awareness of current IT industry practice coupled with the broader impact of their discipline in society, academics from Victoria University and Federation University initiated an across-institutional collaboration. The initiative resulted in a common formative assessment task undertaken by teams of students enrolled in each institution’s professional development units. An initial survey of students was undertaken prior to the assessment task. The survey queried students’ perceptions of a broad range of professional attitudes and skill sets needed by IT professionals when compared to non-skilled workers. Upon the completion of the assessment task, students were surveyed again as to their perceptions of the importance of personal skills, technical competencies, professional and team working skills, workplace knowledge, and cultural awareness for their future professional lives. Comparisons of both surveys’ results revealed that the cohort had a greater appreciation of technical abilities and team-working skills post the assessment task.




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IT Teachers’ Experience of Teaching–Learning Strategies to Promote Critical Thinking

Information Technology (IT) high school learners are constantly struggling to cope with the challenges of succeeding in the subject. IT teachers, therefore, need to be empowered to utilize appropriate teaching–learning strategies to improve IT learners’ success in the subject. By promoting critical thinking skills, IT learners have the opportunity to achieve greater success in the most difficult part of the curriculum, which is programming. Participating IT teachers received once-off face-to-face professional development where some teachers received professional development in critical thinking strategies while other IT teachers received professional development in critical thinking strategies infused into pair programming. To determine how teachers experience these suggested strategies, teachers participated in initial interviews as well as follow-up interviews after they had implemented the suggested strategies. From the interviews, it became evident that teachers felt that their learners benefited from the strategies. Teachers in the pair programming infusing critical thinking strategies focused more on the pair programming implementation than on the totality of pair programming infused with critical thinking. Although teachers were initially willing to change their ways, they were not always willing to implement new teaching–learning strategies.




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The Use of Computer Simulation to Compare Student performance in Traditional versus Distance Learning Environments

Simulations have been shown to be an effective tool in traditional learning environments; however, as distance learning grows in popularity, the need to examine simulation effectiveness in this environment has become paramount. A casual-comparative design was chosen for this study to determine whether students using a computer-based instructional simulation in hybrid and fully online environments learned better than traditional classroom learners. The study spans a period of 6 years beginning fall 2008 through spring 2014. The population studied was 281 undergraduate business students self-enrolled in a 200-level microcomputer application course. The overall results support previous studies in that computer simulations are most effective when used as a supplement to face-to-face lectures and in hybrid environments.