TY - JOUR AU - Irwahand, Fathin Nurul Ezzati AU - Mat-Rasid, Siti Musliha AU - Lee, Jeffrey Low Fok AU - Elumalai, Gunathevan AU - Shahril, Mohd Izwan AU - Ahmad, Mohamad Azri Ismail PY - 2022/09/26 Y2 - 2024/03/29 TI - Perceived barriers to adopting information and communication technology in physical education JF - Pedagogy of Physical Culture and Sports JA - ppcs VL - 26 IS - 5 SE - Articles DO - 10.15561/26649837.2022.0503 UR - https://sportpedagogy.org.ua/index.php/ppcs/article/view/1981 SP - 291-299 AB - <p><em>Background and Study Aim.</em> The use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) in Physical Education (PE) brings the science of sports to life by combining physical and mental activity. It also helps students focus better on practical and theoretical work. The purpose of this study was to investigate the perceived barriers to adopting ICTs in PE lessons among high school teachers in Malaysia.</p><p><em>Material and Methods. </em>A total of 112 Physical Education teachers were selected by stratified random sampling to answer an online questionnaire. Cluster analysis was then conducted to classify PE teachers’ profiles according to the frequency scores of experiencing challenges in using ICT tools in PE teaching and learning. Discriminant analyses were performed to determine the significant barriers related to technology that differentiate these clusters.</p><p><em>Results. </em>In conclusion, Cluster analysis identified three well-defined profiles: cluster 1 (excellent degrees in applying ICT to their teaching practices) consists of 44 teachers; cluster 2 (moderate degrees in applying ICT to their teaching practices) consist of 41 teachers; cluster 3 (poor degrees in applying ICT to their teaching practices) consist of 27 teachers. Results revealed seven out of twelve technology-related barriers were significant among these clusters.&nbsp; They are the insufficient number of computers (p&lt;0.001), insufficient number of internet‐connected computers (p&lt;0.001), insufficient pedagogical support for teachers (p&lt;0.001), lack of content in the national language (p&lt;0.001), pressure to prepare students for exams and tests (p&lt;0.001), no or unclear benefit to using ICT for teaching (p&lt;0.001) and perception of using ICT in teaching and learning not being a goal in their school (p&lt;0.001).</p><p><em>Conclusions. </em>Awareness of these barriers has implications for physical education, curriculum design, teacher training, and youth participation in the school environment. The positive opinions and attitudes of PE teachers toward ICTs as educational tools could pave the way for improving their digital literacy. Thus increase their rate of use of these tools if they are provided with the appropriate technical resources and training.</p> ER -