英文摘要 |
OpenCourseWare (OCW) denotes digital free college-lessons published by worldwide universities. The study reports on university learners’ (n = 127) and public learners’ (n = 86) perceptions of roles of instructor-charisma importance and independent access in explaining OCW learning quality (i.e., learning efficiency, content usefulness) and outcomes (i.e., learning effectiveness, content satisfaction, future use of OCW). The OCW was developed at a university in Taiwan, and featured with science-engineering-related courses. The seven variables and demographic information were surveyed online by item-measures analyzed via Mplus 7.11. Results of single-group analyses (i.e., the university and public communities) confirmed instructor-charisma importance and independent access directly predict learning quality, and indirectly predict learning outcomes via quality. Results of multi-group analyses were noteworthy. Instructor-charisma importance and learning effectiveness negatively explain content satisfaction from the university learners’ perceptions, but positively from the public. The greater instructor-charisma importance and learning effectiveness the university learners endorsed, the lower content satisfaction they expressed, vice versa. From the university learner’s perceptions, three paths showed larger magnitude than their counterpart: 1) from instructor-charisma importance to content usefulness; 2) from content usefulness to content satisfaction; 3) and from content usefulness to future use of OCW. Implications for how to enhance OCW utility for varying learners are discussed. |