Web-based technology has a dramatic impact on learning and teaching. A framework that delineates the relationships between learner control and learning effectiveness is absent. This study aims to fill this void. Our work focuses on the effectiveness of a technology-mediated virtual learning environment (TVLE) in the context of basic information technology skills training. Grounded in the technology-mediated learning literature, this study presents a framework that addresses the relationship between the learner control and learning effectiveness, which contains four categories: learning achievement, self-efficacy, satisfaction, and learning climate.
In order to compare the learning effectiveness under traditional classroom
and TVLE, we conducted a field experiment. Data were collected from a junior
high school of Taiwan. A total of 210 usable responses were analysed. We
identified four results from this study.