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Cross-cultural validation of UTAUT: the case of University VLEs in Jordan, Russia and the UK

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Cross-cultural validation of UTAUT: the case of University VLEs in Jordan, Russia and the UK. / Simeonova, Boyka; Bogolyubov, Pavel; Blagov, Evgeny et al.
In: Electronic Journal of Knowledge Management, Vol. 12, No. 1, 2014, p. 25-34.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Simeonova, B, Bogolyubov, P, Blagov, E & Kharabseh, R 2014, 'Cross-cultural validation of UTAUT: the case of University VLEs in Jordan, Russia and the UK', Electronic Journal of Knowledge Management, vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 25-34. <http://www.ejkm.com/volume12/issue1/p25>

APA

Simeonova, B., Bogolyubov, P., Blagov, E., & Kharabseh, R. (2014). Cross-cultural validation of UTAUT: the case of University VLEs in Jordan, Russia and the UK. Electronic Journal of Knowledge Management, 12(1), 25-34. http://www.ejkm.com/volume12/issue1/p25

Vancouver

Simeonova B, Bogolyubov P, Blagov E, Kharabseh R. Cross-cultural validation of UTAUT: the case of University VLEs in Jordan, Russia and the UK. Electronic Journal of Knowledge Management. 2014;12(1):25-34.

Author

Simeonova, Boyka ; Bogolyubov, Pavel ; Blagov, Evgeny et al. / Cross-cultural validation of UTAUT : the case of University VLEs in Jordan, Russia and the UK. In: Electronic Journal of Knowledge Management. 2014 ; Vol. 12, No. 1. pp. 25-34.

Bibtex

@article{03e90d7fd70046c085f98a78af05c6c0,
title = "Cross-cultural validation of UTAUT: the case of University VLEs in Jordan, Russia and the UK",
abstract = "Abstract: Virtual Learning Environments (VLEs) are learning platforms within universities aiming to facilitate and enhance students{\textquoteright} learning. In order to increase the chances for success of VLEs implementation it is essential to identify the factors which influence the students{\textquoteright} decision making as far as accepting and using VLEs are concerned. In this paper we are applying one of the most popular models, the so‑called Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) model developed by Venkatesh et al. (2003) to identify and test the underlying factors influencing VLE acceptance and use. UTAUT is a relatively new model sparsely applied in cross‑cultural settings and in the context of Higher Education (Straub, 2009). We are testing the model in four business schools in universities in three different countries: the UK, Russia and Jordan. The results show that although all items from the original UTAUT questionnaire have their place in the final groupings obtained through the factor analysis, the {\textquoteleft}clean{\textquoteright} agglomeration of items into groups shown by the original paper and a few others could not be replicated in the individual countries or in the overall sample despite the good sample size obtained in our study. The paper raises a question about the replicability of the original results and calls for reconsideration of the way the model is applied.",
keywords = "UTAUT, technology acceptance, virtual learning environments, higher education",
author = "Boyka Simeonova and Pavel Bogolyubov and Evgeny Blagov and Radwan Kharabseh",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "25--34",
journal = "Electronic Journal of Knowledge Management",
issn = "1479-4411",
publisher = "Academic Conferences and Publishing International",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cross-cultural validation of UTAUT

T2 - the case of University VLEs in Jordan, Russia and the UK

AU - Simeonova, Boyka

AU - Bogolyubov, Pavel

AU - Blagov, Evgeny

AU - Kharabseh, Radwan

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Abstract: Virtual Learning Environments (VLEs) are learning platforms within universities aiming to facilitate and enhance students’ learning. In order to increase the chances for success of VLEs implementation it is essential to identify the factors which influence the students’ decision making as far as accepting and using VLEs are concerned. In this paper we are applying one of the most popular models, the so‑called Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) model developed by Venkatesh et al. (2003) to identify and test the underlying factors influencing VLE acceptance and use. UTAUT is a relatively new model sparsely applied in cross‑cultural settings and in the context of Higher Education (Straub, 2009). We are testing the model in four business schools in universities in three different countries: the UK, Russia and Jordan. The results show that although all items from the original UTAUT questionnaire have their place in the final groupings obtained through the factor analysis, the ‘clean’ agglomeration of items into groups shown by the original paper and a few others could not be replicated in the individual countries or in the overall sample despite the good sample size obtained in our study. The paper raises a question about the replicability of the original results and calls for reconsideration of the way the model is applied.

AB - Abstract: Virtual Learning Environments (VLEs) are learning platforms within universities aiming to facilitate and enhance students’ learning. In order to increase the chances for success of VLEs implementation it is essential to identify the factors which influence the students’ decision making as far as accepting and using VLEs are concerned. In this paper we are applying one of the most popular models, the so‑called Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) model developed by Venkatesh et al. (2003) to identify and test the underlying factors influencing VLE acceptance and use. UTAUT is a relatively new model sparsely applied in cross‑cultural settings and in the context of Higher Education (Straub, 2009). We are testing the model in four business schools in universities in three different countries: the UK, Russia and Jordan. The results show that although all items from the original UTAUT questionnaire have their place in the final groupings obtained through the factor analysis, the ‘clean’ agglomeration of items into groups shown by the original paper and a few others could not be replicated in the individual countries or in the overall sample despite the good sample size obtained in our study. The paper raises a question about the replicability of the original results and calls for reconsideration of the way the model is applied.

KW - UTAUT

KW - technology acceptance

KW - virtual learning environments

KW - higher education

M3 - Journal article

VL - 12

SP - 25

EP - 34

JO - Electronic Journal of Knowledge Management

JF - Electronic Journal of Knowledge Management

SN - 1479-4411

IS - 1

ER -