Moderating Effects of Personality Traits On Online Learning Transition and Acceptance Among Culinary Arts Students

Many Higher Education Institutions (HEI) students had to make an immediate change to online learning from the conventional face-to-face mode due to the COVID-19 pandemic and Movement Control Order (MCO) imposed by the government. Learning practical courses such as Culinary Arts via online without ap...

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Published in:Journal of Technical Education and Training
Main Author: Hashim N.; Mohamed M.H.; Aziz L.A.; Abd Patah M.O.R.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Penerbit UTHM 2022
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85144977323&doi=10.30880%2fjtet.2022.14.03.004&partnerID=40&md5=ba309254a32725e501ec83fda03faa6a
id 2-s2.0-85144977323
spelling 2-s2.0-85144977323
Hashim N.; Mohamed M.H.; Aziz L.A.; Abd Patah M.O.R.
Moderating Effects of Personality Traits On Online Learning Transition and Acceptance Among Culinary Arts Students
2022
Journal of Technical Education and Training
14
3
10.30880/jtet.2022.14.03.004
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85144977323&doi=10.30880%2fjtet.2022.14.03.004&partnerID=40&md5=ba309254a32725e501ec83fda03faa6a
Many Higher Education Institutions (HEI) students had to make an immediate change to online learning from the conventional face-to-face mode due to the COVID-19 pandemic and Movement Control Order (MCO) imposed by the government. Learning practical courses such as Culinary Arts via online without application or practical work generated bigger challenges for HEIs. It was emphasised that Culinary Arts education depends predominantly on hands-on application and training. The purpose of this study is to investigate Culinary Arts program students’ acceptance with online learning methods (hands-on learning at home) and how the Big Five Personality Traits (BFPT) could have an impact on the relationship. A total of 234 responses from Culinary Arts based program students of six (6) HEIs in Malaysia were obtained and analysed using SPSS statistical software. Findings showed that students were able to accept the transition in learning from face-to-face to online learning. However, it was found that BFPT did not have a significant moderating impact on the relationship between Learning Transition and Online Learning Acceptance. The results could help HEIs in adapting to the new Learning Transition without compromising the quality of the graduates and the curriculum set by the institutions. In addition, the results of this study could enhance further investigations on Online Learning Acceptance to a wider scope and type of study programs. © Universiti Tun Hussein Onn Malaysia Publisher’s Office.
Penerbit UTHM
22298932
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Hashim N.; Mohamed M.H.; Aziz L.A.; Abd Patah M.O.R.
spellingShingle Hashim N.; Mohamed M.H.; Aziz L.A.; Abd Patah M.O.R.
Moderating Effects of Personality Traits On Online Learning Transition and Acceptance Among Culinary Arts Students
author_facet Hashim N.; Mohamed M.H.; Aziz L.A.; Abd Patah M.O.R.
author_sort Hashim N.; Mohamed M.H.; Aziz L.A.; Abd Patah M.O.R.
title Moderating Effects of Personality Traits On Online Learning Transition and Acceptance Among Culinary Arts Students
title_short Moderating Effects of Personality Traits On Online Learning Transition and Acceptance Among Culinary Arts Students
title_full Moderating Effects of Personality Traits On Online Learning Transition and Acceptance Among Culinary Arts Students
title_fullStr Moderating Effects of Personality Traits On Online Learning Transition and Acceptance Among Culinary Arts Students
title_full_unstemmed Moderating Effects of Personality Traits On Online Learning Transition and Acceptance Among Culinary Arts Students
title_sort Moderating Effects of Personality Traits On Online Learning Transition and Acceptance Among Culinary Arts Students
publishDate 2022
container_title Journal of Technical Education and Training
container_volume 14
container_issue 3
doi_str_mv 10.30880/jtet.2022.14.03.004
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85144977323&doi=10.30880%2fjtet.2022.14.03.004&partnerID=40&md5=ba309254a32725e501ec83fda03faa6a
description Many Higher Education Institutions (HEI) students had to make an immediate change to online learning from the conventional face-to-face mode due to the COVID-19 pandemic and Movement Control Order (MCO) imposed by the government. Learning practical courses such as Culinary Arts via online without application or practical work generated bigger challenges for HEIs. It was emphasised that Culinary Arts education depends predominantly on hands-on application and training. The purpose of this study is to investigate Culinary Arts program students’ acceptance with online learning methods (hands-on learning at home) and how the Big Five Personality Traits (BFPT) could have an impact on the relationship. A total of 234 responses from Culinary Arts based program students of six (6) HEIs in Malaysia were obtained and analysed using SPSS statistical software. Findings showed that students were able to accept the transition in learning from face-to-face to online learning. However, it was found that BFPT did not have a significant moderating impact on the relationship between Learning Transition and Online Learning Acceptance. The results could help HEIs in adapting to the new Learning Transition without compromising the quality of the graduates and the curriculum set by the institutions. In addition, the results of this study could enhance further investigations on Online Learning Acceptance to a wider scope and type of study programs. © Universiti Tun Hussein Onn Malaysia Publisher’s Office.
publisher Penerbit UTHM
issn 22298932
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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