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Featured researches published by Mete Akcaoglu.


Educational Management Administration & Leadership | 2013

Instructional leadership in Turkish primary schools: An analysis of teachers’ perceptions and current policy

Sedat Gumus; Mete Akcaoglu

School leadership, one of the most important aspects of school improvement, has not received much attention from either policymakers or researchers in Turkey despite many countries embrace creating and developing effective leaders as one of the important first steps to improve their education. This research looked at the instructional leadership skills of Turkish principals from the teachers perspective measured through a survey collected from primary school teachers in five different cities in Turkey, first, to describe the current situation and, second, to find out if teachers’ experience and gender affect their views. The results show that Turkish principals practice their instructional leadership roles only occasionally and teachers’ gender significantly affects their perception.


Technology, Pedagogy and Education | 2015

Policy, practice, and reality: exploring a nation-wide technology implementation in Turkish schools

Mete Akcaoglu; Sedat Gumus; Mehmet Sukru Bellibas; D. Matthew Boyer

Technology has already become an indispensable part of our lives, and nations around the world see schools as the main agents to prepare their youth for a technology-filled future, and invest important amounts of funding to provide hardware to schools, students and teachers. The Turkish Ministry of National Education is in the midst of the FATİH project, a nation-wide attempt to provide each classroom with an interactive whiteboard and each student with a tablet computer. In this paper, the authors present interview data from teachers at first-year FATİH pilot schools who are using these technologies to understand how this national attempt is being translated into practice, and identify what is working and what areas need further attunement. Results show that teachers were especially content with being able to make their lessons visually more appealing for their students. They were, however, not satisfied with the in-service training provided, especially in understanding ways to effectively integrate the technologies into their teaching, and the limitations put upon Internet access from the tablets. The impacts of these tools on their teaching practices were very minimal.


E-learning and Digital Media | 2016

An investigation of State Educational Twitter Hashtags (SETHs) as affinity spaces

Joshua M. Rosenberg; Spencer P. Greenhalgh; Matthew J. Koehler; Erica R. Hamilton; Mete Akcaoglu

Affinity spaces are digital or physical spaces in which participants interact with one another around content of shared interest and through a common portal (or platform). Among teachers, some of the largest affinity spaces may be those organized around hashtags on Twitter: These spaces are public, largely unmoderated, and thriving, yet very little is known about them, especially those based in geographical areas such as American states. This paper examines these potential affinity spaces by providing the first large-scale study of them in the form of an examination of 47 State Educational Twitter Hashtags (SETHs). Collecting over 550,000 tweets over 6 months, our analysis focused on who is participating in SETHs, how active participants are, and when participation occurred. We found support for two of Gees tenets of affinity spaces, in particular many interactions through a shared portal. Though the content of tweets were not the focus, this study’s findings lend support to efforts to identify which particular SETHs will be best suited to subsequent analysis of their content and what times subsequent analysis might most productively focus on. We discuss implications for how we conceive of teacher professional development and suggest directions for future research focused on the content of tweets associated with SETHs.


Computers in Human Behavior | 2016

Using instructor-led Facebook groups to enhance students perceptions of course content

Mete Akcaoglu; Nicholas David Bowman

Research on the impact of instructor-guided Facebook usage in college classrooms shows that the technology can increase students cognitive and affective learning, yet the role of social media in the classroom remains contentious. Analysis of open- and closed-ended survey data from 87 students enrolled in university courses from 15 institutions showed that students participating in a class Facebook group reported more interest in and perceived more value in course content, felt closer to the course and perceived their instructors as more involved. Effects on perceived closeness to course instructors and classmates were negligible, and effects on instructor immediacy or credibility were not found. As an out-of-class communication tool, Facebook increases student interest.Students who joined course Facebooks groups saw greater utility value of course content.Academic and social reasons are listed for participating in course Facebook groups.


Education and Information Technologies | 2018

Development of an instrument to measure Faculty’s information and communication technology access (FICTA)

Kamal Ahmed Soomro; Ugur Kale; Reagan Curtis; Mete Akcaoglu; Malayna Bernstein

The phenomenon of “digital divide” is complex and multidimensional, extending beyond issues of physical access. The purpose of this study was to develop a scale to measure a range of factors related to digital divide among higher education faculty and to evaluate its reliability and validity. Faculty’s Information and Communication Technology Access (FICTA) scale was tested and validated with 322 faculty teaching in public and private sector universities. Principal components analysis with varimax rotation confirmed an 8-factor solution corresponding to various dimensions of ICT access. The 57-item FICTA scale demonstrated good psychometric properties and offers researchers a tool to examine faculty’s access to ICT at four levels – motivational, physical, skills, and usage access.


Distance Education | 2018

Using Facebook groups to support social presence in online learning

Mete Akcaoglu; Eunbae Lee

ABSTRACT Building interpersonal connections in asynchronous online learning is important, but it is harder to achieve compared to face-to-face learning experiences due to its mostly text-based nature. Facebook is a popular social media platform and has been used as an outside-class communication space in formal learning contexts to supplement cognitive and affective aspects of learning. In this study, we used Facebook groups as supplemental social spaces in two asynchronous online master’s-level courses to understand if it impacted students’ perceptions of social presence (i.e., copresence, immediacy, and intimacy), learning interaction with faculty and peers, as well as sociability of the online learning environment. The results indicated that students felt more positively about social presence and learning interactions with other classmates and their instructor and perceived the course as having more sociability after they joined the class Facebook group. Findings have implications for supporting social impression formation in online learning.


Internet and Higher Education | 2014

“I see smart people!”: Using Facebook to supplement cognitive and affective learning in the university mass lecture

Nicholas David Bowman; Mete Akcaoglu


Techtrends | 2013

Blending Synchronous Face-to-face and Computer-Supported Cooperative Learning in a Hybrid Doctoral Seminar

Cary J. Roseth; Mete Akcaoglu; Andrea Zellner


Computers in Education | 2014

Cognitive outcomes from the Game-Design and Learning (GDL) after-school program

Mete Akcaoglu; Matthew J. Koehler


Educational Technology Research and Development | 2014

Learning problem-solving through making games at the game design and learning summer program

Mete Akcaoglu

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Erica R. Hamilton

Grand Valley State University

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Ugur Kale

West Virginia University

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