ED-PHCYMay 18

Faculty Orientations Shape Adoption of AI in Research and Teaching

arXiv:2605.1814041.0
Predicted impact top 59% in ED-PH · last 90 daysOriginality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

For higher education researchers and administrators, this identifies a key psychological factor driving AI adoption that is not captured by existing technology-adoption models.

A survey of 90 STEM faculty found that a construct called 'AI pedagogical orientation' strongly predicts AI use across research and teaching, while institutional factors and demographics have weak associations.

Despite the widespread availability of large language models (LLMs) in higher education, instructors vary substantially in their adoption and use of these tools, and the reasons for this variation remain poorly understood. A mixed-methods survey of 90 STEM faculty in the Research Corporation for Science Advancement (RCSA) Cottrell community examined relationships between AI use, attitudes, institutional context, and instructional practice. Exploratory factor analysis identified a coherent construct, \textit{AI pedagogical orientation}, that strongly predicted self-reported AI use across research, teaching, and other professional activities. Qualitative analysis indicated that this construct reflected differing views about the role AI should play in disciplinary thinking, learning, and expertise development, rather than simply positive or negative attitudes toward AI. Institutional initiatives, demographic variables, and information sources showed comparatively weak associations with AI use. The results suggest that existing technology-adoption models may not fully explain adoption in contexts where technologies interact directly with disciplinary reasoning and knowledge production.

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