Education Sciences (Oct 2022)

Emergency Remote Education and Its Impact on Higher Education: A Temporary or Permanent Shift in Instruction?

  • Cathrine Linnes,
  • Giulio Ronzoni,
  • Jerome Agrusa,
  • Joseph Lema

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12100721
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 10
p. 721

Abstract

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The COVID-19 pandemic has led to problems and upheaval throughout the higher-education sector, with university campuses ceasing face-to-face instruction and with assessments shifting to an online model for a few years. As a result, the pandemic prompted educators to teach online, utilizing online lectures, narrated power points, audio snippets, podcasts, instant messaging, and interactive videos, whereas traditional universities had primarily relied on in-person courses. Evaluations, which included assignments and multiple-choice questions, were conducted online, forcing lecturers to reconsider how deliverables were set up to prevent students from having easy access to the answers in a textbook or online. Learning from college students’ experiences throughout this time period will assist higher-education stakeholders (administration, faculty, and students) in adapting future online course delivery selections for higher education. In this study, we investigated the experiences of students learning from a distance, as well as aspects of their learning. We provide recommendations for higher education. The COVID-19 pandemic has clearly resulted in the largest distance-learning experiment in history.

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