Abstract
To meet the learning demands of new generation students, higher education institutions should apply relevant breakthroughs in science, technology, and education to update their educational policies or teaching techniques.
Aim
To investigate the relationship between nursing students' readiness and attitudes toward e-learning, as well as the role of self‑leadership in mediating this relationship.
This is a descriptive comparative research. A total of 410 students consented to participate after being recruited from two nursing colleges at Alexandria and Damanhur Universities in Egypt and completing self-administered, online surveys.
The majority of the participants (83.3 % and 76.9 %, respectively) were female from Alexandria and Damanhur University, and their mean self‑leadership scores were 3.89.49 at Alexandria and 3.65.40 at Damanhur University. According to the SEM, self‑leadership accounted for 74 % of the variance in students' attitudes and 87 % of the variance in students' readiness for e-learning.
Self‑leadership is an important predictor of students' attitudes and readiness for e-learning. The study's implications: Self‑leadership allows students to accept responsibility for themselves, and the idea that one can be accountable for guiding oneself through life is thrilling, especially in today's environment.
•Self-leadership results in enhancing readiness and attitude toward e-learning among college students.•Self-leadership act as mediator and effect on strengthen the relationship between student’ readiness and attitude toward e-learning.•Nursing students have from moderate to high readiness for e-learning in relation to skill application domain of e-learning.•Nursing students have moderate attitude toward e-learning related to multimedia instruction and behavioral intention domains of e-learning.