Institutional-Repository, University of Moratuwa.  

Use of ICT among secondary schools in the North Central Province of Sri Lanka

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.advisor Wickramarachchi, RAP
dc.contributor.author Palagolla, WWNCK
dc.date.accessioned 2011-05-12T04:23:34Z
dc.date.available 2011-05-12T04:23:34Z
dc.date.issued 5/12/2011
dc.identifier.uri http://dl.lib.mrt.ac.lk/theses/handle/123/763
dc.description A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Information Technology for the MSc in Information Technology en_US
dc.description.abstract The study investigates diverse individual and organizational factors affecting the effective use of ICT among ICT facilitated secondary schools in the North Central Province of Sri Lanka. In turn it will examine the impact of the use of ICT on individuals' job performances. Empirical data were gathered from a simple random sample of 150 teachers in 30 selected schools using the structured questionnaire methodology.//Overall, the results show considerably low level of ICT integration over 71 percent of respondents of the survey. A fairly notable variation was found in the extent to which respondents use ICT for both informationlknowledge creation and dissemination against informationlknowledge storage and applications at work. Over one-half of the sample as a whole show low level of ICT competency, which highlights lack training opportunities on task-technology fit. Majority of the sample reveal ICT infrastructure, leadership support, and school planning as major constraints of this scenario. In contrast, respondents' fairly positive attitudes towards ICT has been a positive remark on future developments. Analysis of variance suggested that individuals' age, gender, ICT education, and English language proficiency are significant demographic predictors of ICT use in schools. The research indicate moderate correlation between ICT use and job performance, which suggests the need of realigning all predecessors of the effective use of ICT in managing organizational informationlknowledge. en_US
dc.description.abstract The study investigates diverse individual and organizational factors affecting the effective use of ICT among ICT facilitated secondary schools in the North Central Province of Sri Lanka. In turn it will examine the impact of the use of ICT on individuals' job performances. Empirical data were gathered from a simple random sample of 150 teachers in 30 selected schools using the structured questionnaire methodology.//Overall, the results show considerably low level of ICT integration over 71 percent of respondents of the survey. A fairly notable variation was found in the extent to which respondents use ICT for both informationlknowledge creation and dissemination against informationlknowledge storage and applications at work. Over one-half of the sample as a whole show low level of ICT competency, which highlights lack training opportunities on task-technology fit. Majority of the sample reveal ICT infrastructure, leadership support, and school planning as major constraints of this scenario. In contrast, respondents' fairly positive attitudes towards ICT has been a positive remark on future developments. Analysis of variance suggested that individuals' age, gender, ICT education, and English language proficiency are significant demographic predictors of ICT use in schools. The research indicate moderate correlation between ICT use and job performance, which suggests the need of realigning all predecessors of the effective use of ICT in managing organizational informationlknowledge.
dc.format.extent x, 105p. : ill., charts en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - Thesis en_US
dc.subject EDUCATION - Sri Lanka en_US
dc.subject SECONDARY EDUCATION en_US
dc.subject INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY - Usage en_US
dc.title Use of ICT among secondary schools in the North Central Province of Sri Lanka en_US
dc.type Thesis-Abstract
dc.identifier.faculty IT en_US
dc.identifier.degree MSc en_US
dc.identifier.department Department of Information Technology en_US
dc.date.accept 2009-12
dc.date.accept 2009-12
dc.identifier.accno 96434 en_US


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record