Education Sciences (May 2021)

Instructional Planning Modifications to Meet Social Distancing Requirements: Secondary and Post-Secondary Options

  • Trina Johnson Kilty,
  • Andrea C. Burrows,
  • Dane Christoffersen,
  • Kevin Thomas Kilty,
  • Kate Muir Welsh,
  • Shawna McBride,
  • Philip Bergmaier,
  • Christian Bitzas,
  • Cierra Rainey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11050217
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
p. 217

Abstract

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Secondary and post-secondary science and engineering educators share common class arrangements with both a laboratory and lecture component, coordinating both components so they build upon each other to create meaningful learning experiences. The COVID-19 pandemic forced educators to convert lectures and exams to online delivery. Doing so came with trade-off decisions about sacrificing laboratory experience goals of hands-on practice, problem-solving, and learning concepts at a deeper, tactile level. Due to rapidly changing conditions, educators faced course redesign to accommodate social distancing and virtual learning requirements. In this study, a team of undergraduate college students including one secondary science preservice teacher planned a set of lessons for STEM outreach to a K–12 audience. The team faced challenges in planning meaningful learning experiences in the face of COVID-19 uncertainty. Options for secondary and post-secondary educators to consider are provided in this article.

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