Exploration of Teachers' Attitudes toward Brain-Based Learning at the University Level
Abstract
Objective: This study looks at how instructors feel about brain-based learning and analyses the impact of
demographics on those feelings.
Study Design: A standardized questionnaire was used to conduct a descriptive design using the survey
approach.
Place and Duration of Study: This study was conducted from 2016 to 2018 at different universities at Islamabad, Pakistan.
Materials and Methods: Through a multilevel mixed sampling procedure, 311 university instructors were
selected as a sample. This survey only included faculty members at universities in Islamabad who are majoring
in the social sciences, management sciences, or arts and humanities.
Results: The mean value of teachers' attitudes toward brain-based learning was 136.12. The male mean, which
is 126.24, is higher than the female mean, which is 121.06, and the difference in means was sizable. Similarly,
academic qualification (p=.024), disciplines (p=.000), age (p=.001), Teaching experiences (p=.006), and
universities (p=.006) have a significant effect on teachers' attitudes toward brain-based learning.
Conclusion: Teachers at the university level were not fully confident in the use of brain-based learning
principles because they were implementing them haphazardly and could not clearly explain why their actions
were beneficial to the teaching-learning process. The attitudes of teachers regarding brain-based learning were
significantly influenced by their gender, age, teaching experiences, universities, teachers' employment in the
public or private sector, their academic specializations, or their educational background.
Copyright (c) 2023 Fozia Fatima, Muhammad Imran Hanif, Safia Fatima, Asiya Zahoor, Sobia Fatima
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