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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rodriguez, Joel Mark P., Austria, Genesis S., Millar, Glen B.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.05722
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author Rodriguez, Joel Mark P.
Austria, Genesis S.
Millar, Glen B.
author_facet Rodriguez, Joel Mark P.
Austria, Genesis S.
Millar, Glen B.
contents This study investigates how ABCD technologies can improve learning assessments in higher education. The objective is to research how students perceive things, plan their behavior, and how ABCD technologies affect individual learning, academic integrity, co-learning, and trust in the assessment. Through a quantitative research design, survey responses were gathered from university students, and statistical tests, such as correlation and regression, were used to establish relationships between Perceived Usefulness (PU), Perceived Ease of Use (PEU), and Behavioral Intention (BI) towards ABCD adoption. The results showed that there was no significant relationship between PU, PEU, and BI, which suggests that students' attitudes, institutional policies, faculty support, and infrastructure matter more in adoption than institutional policies, faculty support, and infrastructure. While students recognize ABCD's efficiency and security benefits, fairness, ease of use, and engagement issues limit their adoption of these technologies. The research adds to Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) and Constructivist Learning Theory (CLT) by emphasizing external drivers of technology adoption. The limitations are based on self-reported data and one institutional sample. It is suggested that universities invest in faculty development, infrastructure, and policy-making to facilitate effective and ethical use of ABCD technologies in higher education.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2503_05722
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publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The Role of AI, Blockchain, Cloud, and Data (ABCD) in Enhancing Learning Assessments of College Students
Rodriguez, Joel Mark P.
Austria, Genesis S.
Millar, Glen B.
Computers and Society
This study investigates how ABCD technologies can improve learning assessments in higher education. The objective is to research how students perceive things, plan their behavior, and how ABCD technologies affect individual learning, academic integrity, co-learning, and trust in the assessment. Through a quantitative research design, survey responses were gathered from university students, and statistical tests, such as correlation and regression, were used to establish relationships between Perceived Usefulness (PU), Perceived Ease of Use (PEU), and Behavioral Intention (BI) towards ABCD adoption. The results showed that there was no significant relationship between PU, PEU, and BI, which suggests that students' attitudes, institutional policies, faculty support, and infrastructure matter more in adoption than institutional policies, faculty support, and infrastructure. While students recognize ABCD's efficiency and security benefits, fairness, ease of use, and engagement issues limit their adoption of these technologies. The research adds to Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) and Constructivist Learning Theory (CLT) by emphasizing external drivers of technology adoption. The limitations are based on self-reported data and one institutional sample. It is suggested that universities invest in faculty development, infrastructure, and policy-making to facilitate effective and ethical use of ABCD technologies in higher education.
title The Role of AI, Blockchain, Cloud, and Data (ABCD) in Enhancing Learning Assessments of College Students
topic Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.05722