Artículos de revistas
Initial evidence to validate an instructional design-derived evaluation scale in higher education programs
Fecha
2016Autor
Espinoza-Guzmán, Julia
Moreira-Mora, Tania
Institución
Resumen
Instructional design has been a key strategy in ensuring the quality of higher
education; therefore, it is essential to evaluate its effects on learning processes
through the use of tools that comply with defined technical standards. Hence,
the purpose of this study is to validate a scale used to evaluate the degree to which
the students perceive the five aspects of instructional design: objectives, curricular
content, learning activities, educational resources, and the existing evaluation
strategy at the Costa Rica Institute of Technology (TEC). Through the use of an
analytical and descriptive study, as well as qualitative and quantitative techniques,
a Likert evaluation scale was designed. According to the results, the final version
of the instrument consisted of 33 items and had a confidence coefficient of 0.923.
In regards to the evidence associated to its validity, it was possible to verify the
representability and relevance of the instructional design components and their
factorial structure. The main conclusion obtained from this study is the importance
of measuring, from a systemic perspective, the instructional design components, in
classroom, blended learning and virtual courses with tools that are properly validated
in order to guarantee the confidence level and valid interpretation of the results.