Pandemic Pedagogy and Emergency Remote Instruction: Transitioning Scheduled In-Person Courses to Online Diminishes Effective Teaching and Student Learning Outcomes

IF 0.6 Q3 COMMUNICATION
Katherine E. Armstrong, Alan K. Goodboy, Matt Shin
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

ABSTRACT Conducted during a semester of remote emergency instruction due to the COVID-19 pandemic, this study examined the effects of rapidly switching an originally scheduled in-person course to an online course offering (after the course had already started in-person) on effective teaching behaviors and student learning outcomes. Results from 163 undergraduate students, who completed survey assessments about their course that was both in-person and then later online, indicated that switching the course modality diminished their learning opportunities by decreasing performance efficacy in the course, sustained attention to instruction, motivation to process the course material, and affect for the course content. Moreover, results indicated that students received less teacher confirmation after the switch, which in turn, produced a decline in learning outcomes. However, students higher in effort regulation were not affected as much by the rapid change in course modality. These findings offer pedagogical implications for emergency remote instruction when originally scheduled face-to-face courses no longer meet in person.
流行病教学法和紧急远程教学:将预定的面对面课程转变为在线课程会降低有效的教学和学生的学习成果
在COVID-19大流行期间进行的一学期远程紧急教学中,本研究考察了将原计划的面对面课程快速切换为在线课程(在课程已经开始之后)对有效教学行为和学生学习成果的影响。163名本科生完成了面对面和随后的在线课程调查评估,结果表明,转换课程模式减少了他们的学习机会,降低了他们在课程中的表现效能、对教学的持续关注、处理课程材料的动机以及对课程内容的影响。此外,结果表明,学生在转换后得到的教师认可减少了,这反过来又导致了学习成果的下降。然而,努力调节能力较高的学生受课程模式快速变化的影响并不大。这些发现为原本安排的面对面课程不再亲自见面时的紧急远程教学提供了教学意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
48
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