%0 Journal Article %T Temporal Cross-lagged Effects Between Subjective Norms and StudentsĄŻAttitudes Regarding the use of Technology %A Stephen A. Sivo %A Cheng-Chang Sam Pan %A James Broophy %J Journal of Educational Media & Library Sciences %D 2004 %I Tamkang University Press %X The present study concentrated on the interplay of subjective norms and attitudes towards WebCT over time in a U.S. higher education setting. Panel data collected on three occasions over the course of a semester were investigated in a Web-enhanced hybrid undergraduate psychology course, using a crosslagged and autoregressive model. Results suggested: 1. the degree to which students report deferring to their professor s expectations and peer opinions (subjective norms) influences the degree to which they, on future occasions, report deferring to their professor s expectations and peer opinions; 2. students attitudes towards using WebCT influence their attitudes assessed on immediately following occasions, but only those attitudes assessed immediately afterwards; 3. the degree to which students report deferring to professorial expectations and peer opinions (subjective norms) influences contemporaneously measured attitudes toward WebCT use; 4. student attitudes regarding WebCT use actually influence how students on a later occasion report their degree of deference to professorial expectations and peer opinions (subjective norms). Further research was suggested. %K Crosslagged and autoregressive model %K Subjective norms %K WebCT introduction %K Students attitude %U http://joemls.dils.tku.edu.tw/fulltext/42/42-1/63-73.pdf