Facebook Use as a Support for Academic Learning among College Students in Technological State Universities and Colleges

Authors

  • Janet A. Orioque Information Technology Department, Palompon Institute of Technology, Palompon, Leyte, Philippines

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.69478/JITC2020v2n2a02

Keywords:

Collaborative Learning, Academic Performance, Ease of Use, Usefulness

Abstract

The main intent of this study was to explore how Facebook Groups impact the academic learning of undergraduate students. A mixed-method of research was applied in this study, in which the quantitative as a core component and the qualitative as supplemental. A sample of 590 college students of the selected State Universities and Colleges (SUCs) in Region VIII was the participants in this study. The researcher collected first the quantitative data and then the qualitative data were gathered second to elucidate, elaborate on, or explain the quantitative findings. The theory anchored on Cruz and Carvalho model for web 2.0 integrations that involves the constructivist, communication and collaboration tools that can be applied in the learning process and Technology Acceptance Model (TMA), to identify factors that may motivate these students to adopt Facebook for educational purposes. Results suggest that there is a significant relationship between the extent of students’ use of Facebook Groups with ease of use, the usefulness of Facebook Groups and academic performance. Furthermore, qualitative results revealed that Facebook Groups facilitate academic learning because it increases their productivity, motivation, and dissemination of information through sharing in school-related information.

Downloads

Published

2020-12-30

Issue

Section

Articles

Categories

How to Cite

Facebook Use as a Support for Academic Learning among College Students in Technological State Universities and Colleges. (2020). Journal of Innovative Technology Convergence, 2(2). https://doi.org/10.69478/JITC2020v2n2a02

Similar Articles

11-20 of 45

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.