Tertiary Educators' Awareness of and Readiness to use Virtual Reality (VR) in Remote Online Learning

COVID-19 pandemic has transformed the conventional education landscape to online remote learning. However, this transition has brought about certain challenges such as low levels of student engagement and motivation, which raises the question of whether students are actually learning. Using Virtual...

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Published in:Proceedings of International Conference on Research in Education and Science
Main Author: Fauzi W.J.; Radzuan N.R.M.; Rosli A.K.; Ngah E.; Romli A.; Wab R.A.; Ahmad W.A.S.W.
Format: Conference paper
Language:English
Published: The International Society for Technology Education and Science 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85184305836&partnerID=40&md5=83776d1a6eb54f2d05d2b62f160987f6
id 2-s2.0-85184305836
spelling 2-s2.0-85184305836
Fauzi W.J.; Radzuan N.R.M.; Rosli A.K.; Ngah E.; Romli A.; Wab R.A.; Ahmad W.A.S.W.
Tertiary Educators' Awareness of and Readiness to use Virtual Reality (VR) in Remote Online Learning
2023
Proceedings of International Conference on Research in Education and Science
9
1

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85184305836&partnerID=40&md5=83776d1a6eb54f2d05d2b62f160987f6
COVID-19 pandemic has transformed the conventional education landscape to online remote learning. However, this transition has brought about certain challenges such as low levels of student engagement and motivation, which raises the question of whether students are actually learning. Using Virtual Reality (VR) in teaching and learning (T&L) could increase engagement as it provides interactive experience that necessitates students’ online presence. Literature shows students are aware of VR benefits, yet not many tertiary educators are using VR. Thus, this study aims to investigate Malaysian tertiary educators’ awareness of VR and readiness to explore its potential in remote online T&L through a questionnaire survey adapted from previous studies that applied the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) as their theoretical framework. Of 26 respondents, only 4 had VR experience in the classroom. While others lacked VR experience, their perceptions were positive, and they were aware of the challenges of using VR. It can be concluded these challenges are partly the reasons why VR is under-utilised. The findings implicate the need to train and familiarise tertiary educators in the use of VR for the continuous intention to use VR. It is believed that when more educators have more intimate knowledge of VR, the more students will benefit regardless if the classes are remote online or otherwise. © 2023 Published by the ISTES Organization
The International Society for Technology Education and Science
28336747
English
Conference paper

author Fauzi W.J.; Radzuan N.R.M.; Rosli A.K.; Ngah E.; Romli A.; Wab R.A.; Ahmad W.A.S.W.
spellingShingle Fauzi W.J.; Radzuan N.R.M.; Rosli A.K.; Ngah E.; Romli A.; Wab R.A.; Ahmad W.A.S.W.
Tertiary Educators' Awareness of and Readiness to use Virtual Reality (VR) in Remote Online Learning
author_facet Fauzi W.J.; Radzuan N.R.M.; Rosli A.K.; Ngah E.; Romli A.; Wab R.A.; Ahmad W.A.S.W.
author_sort Fauzi W.J.; Radzuan N.R.M.; Rosli A.K.; Ngah E.; Romli A.; Wab R.A.; Ahmad W.A.S.W.
title Tertiary Educators' Awareness of and Readiness to use Virtual Reality (VR) in Remote Online Learning
title_short Tertiary Educators' Awareness of and Readiness to use Virtual Reality (VR) in Remote Online Learning
title_full Tertiary Educators' Awareness of and Readiness to use Virtual Reality (VR) in Remote Online Learning
title_fullStr Tertiary Educators' Awareness of and Readiness to use Virtual Reality (VR) in Remote Online Learning
title_full_unstemmed Tertiary Educators' Awareness of and Readiness to use Virtual Reality (VR) in Remote Online Learning
title_sort Tertiary Educators' Awareness of and Readiness to use Virtual Reality (VR) in Remote Online Learning
publishDate 2023
container_title Proceedings of International Conference on Research in Education and Science
container_volume 9
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85184305836&partnerID=40&md5=83776d1a6eb54f2d05d2b62f160987f6
description COVID-19 pandemic has transformed the conventional education landscape to online remote learning. However, this transition has brought about certain challenges such as low levels of student engagement and motivation, which raises the question of whether students are actually learning. Using Virtual Reality (VR) in teaching and learning (T&L) could increase engagement as it provides interactive experience that necessitates students’ online presence. Literature shows students are aware of VR benefits, yet not many tertiary educators are using VR. Thus, this study aims to investigate Malaysian tertiary educators’ awareness of VR and readiness to explore its potential in remote online T&L through a questionnaire survey adapted from previous studies that applied the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) as their theoretical framework. Of 26 respondents, only 4 had VR experience in the classroom. While others lacked VR experience, their perceptions were positive, and they were aware of the challenges of using VR. It can be concluded these challenges are partly the reasons why VR is under-utilised. The findings implicate the need to train and familiarise tertiary educators in the use of VR for the continuous intention to use VR. It is believed that when more educators have more intimate knowledge of VR, the more students will benefit regardless if the classes are remote online or otherwise. © 2023 Published by the ISTES Organization
publisher The International Society for Technology Education and Science
issn 28336747
language English
format Conference paper
accesstype
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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