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    Business Students’ Learning Engagement as a Function of Reading Assigned E-Textbooks

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    Author
    Stites-Doe, Susan
    Maxwell, Patricia E.
    Kegler, Jennifer Little
    Keyword
    Electronic Textbooks
    Digital Reading
    E-Textbooks
    Multi-Tasking
    Reading E-Textbooks
    Student Engagement
    Wikipedia
    Date Published
    2013-01-01
    
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    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12648/2567
    Abstract
    In this chapter we report findings from a quantitative and qualitative pilot study of students from a single university setting in the northeastern United States. The majority of participants were enrolled in either face-to-face or online sections of a business course in organizational behavior, and the textbook modality included both open (PDF) and proprietary (CourseSmart) digital formats. The key research questions focus on the degree to which students feel satisfied with electronic textbooks (e-textbooks). We also explore correlates of students’ satisfaction and their positive attitudes regarding the functionality of the use of e-textbooks by examining the impact of prior coursework and students’ concurrent use of other Internet sites, e.g., social media networks, while reading e-textbooks. Specifically, we explore the extent to which students’ positive attitudes toward the functionality of e-textbook use is sufficient to result in students’ engagement. Engagement is measured via their intentions to buy additional e-textbooks in the future, their course grades, and their perceptions of comprehension of the material over time. Students’ overall satisfaction with the e-textbook is likewise explored to determine impact on the same measures of engagement.
    Description
    Stites-Doe, S., Maxwell, P. & Kegler, J. (2013). Business students’ learning engagement as a function of reading assigned e-Textbooks. In L.A. Wankel, P. Blessinger & C.L. Wankel (Eds.) Increasing Student Engagement and Retention using Mobile Applications: Smartphones, Skype and Texting Technologies: Cutting-edge technologies in Higher Education,( Vol. 6D, pp. 241–273).Emerald Press: Bingley, UK.
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