Sustainable Transition to Studying Abroad Online during the COVID-19 Pandemic: An Ecological Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Technology Integration in SA
2.2. SA Online during the COVID-19 Pandemic
- What challenges did the participants encounter when transitioning to SA online?
- How did the participant conquer these challenges?
- What influenced the effects of conquering these challenges?
3. Theoretical Framework
3.1. Individual-Environment Mutuality
3.2. Intentional Dynamics
3.3. Dynamics of Intentions
- Individual-environment mutuality, consisting of: (a) the affordances-effectivities dual which concerns the joint effect of the environment and individual properties on the individual’s action, and (b) the perceptions-actions dual which focuses on the actions side and concerns the re-tuning effect of the individual’s actions on the environment.
- Intentional dynamics. It captures how an individual’s use of environmental affordances is affected by intentions at different levels. It focuses on the shaping influence of the individual’s perceived expectations in the environment on their actions as they strive to achieve their own aims.
- Dynamics of intentions. It denotes the multiplicity of an individual’s goals, or a change of prioritised goals and an emergence of new goals across time.
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Research Participant and the SA Program
4.2. Data Collection and Analysis
- A cast of characters. We identified people who appeared in DM’s story.
- A precipitating breach of expectations (i.e., complications). We identified how transferring to online learning affected DM’s SA experience and the challenges he encountered.
- The resulting actions by which the characters change or come to terms with the breach. We identified how DM and other characters dealt with the new situation.
- A resolution. We identified whether an event represented a successful enactment of the affordances of the online format of SA or whether there remained challenges to be solved.
5. Results
5.1. Successful Enactment of the Affordances of SA Online
5.1.1. Setting up the Online Learning Environment
- Individual-environment mutuality. In this case, the learners’ adoption of certain software for online learning was co-influenced by the affordances of different platforms (e.g., instant communication, information storage, tracking progress, etc.) and the learners’ abilities to navigate and coordinate the functions of these tools, corresponded to the affordances-effectivities dual. In particular, the learners’ increased familiarity with the functions of different platforms played a critical role in their enhanced choice of software. As for the perception-action dual, which emphasises the action side, the learners’ constant exploration of the appropriate use of software retuned the technological environment, causing it to be friendlier than it was at the beginning.
- Intentional dynamics. DM’s intention was to transition to online learning smoothly using the software available. His choice of software was facilitated by a perceived expectation in the learning community of how different platforms should be adopted appropriately and how creative approaches can be used to ‘apply digital solutions to new problems’.
- Dynamics of intentions. DM developed clearer goals for using each kind of digital platform. This facilitated a more structured and efficient online learning environment.
5.1.2. Optimising the Benefits of Online Learning
- Individual-environment mutuality. DM’s utilisation of online resources was influenced by both technological affordances (e.g., information accessible anywhere and anytime) and his own abilities in terms of time management as well as the use of these digital tools. While this online environment afforded flexibility, responsiveness and structured learning content, DM’s own skill in monitoring his learning process enabled him to take advantage of these affordances (i.e., affordances-effectivities dual). His customisation of online learning activities to his own preference reflexively shaped the environment to become both relevant and beneficial (i.e., perception-action dual).
- Intentional dynamics. The people who interacted with DM (university staff, professors, and teaching assistants) contributed to a shared expectation of the new online environment as flexible, organised, and responsive. Therefore, DM’s intentional activities (his pursuit of self-initiated projects, focus on job hunting, speeding up of lecture recordings, and contacting professors on WeChat) to maximise the online experience were promoted by perceived flexibility and responsiveness in the environment.
- Dynamics of intentions. Since DM had already experienced China in person in the first semester, his main goal changed from full immersion to job hunting in the second semester. This change of goals allowed him to identify the relevance of online learning to his current pursuits, thus, optimising his experience.
5.1.3. Sustaining Motivation to Study
- Individual-environment mutuality. DM’s efforts to sustain his study motivation were not only affected by the affordances available in the environment (online course materials that were accessible at any time) but also his own high self-regulating abilities. His regulated learning behaviours, in turn, fed into his environment, making its positive affordances more detectable and usable for DM. These same flexible features of online learning might be hindrances for students lacking self-discipline strategies.
- Intentional dynamics. It has been mentioned that DM perceived a shared expectation of the new online environment being flexible, organised and responsive. This perception was linked to DM’s strong intention to achieve high grades in the program and encouraged him to maintain a good study routine.
- Dynamics of intentions. DM always intended to achieve high grades in his studies. However, in response to the transition to online, his specific goal of replicating the scheduling of a normal in-person semester emerged, which further promoted his self-regulated learning activities.
5.2. Unsolved Obstacles to SA Online
5.2.1. Losing Interpersonal Connection
- Individual-environment mutuality. The affordances-effectivities dual suggests that whether an individual utilises the affordances in the environment is contingent on both the affordances available and the individual’s effectivities. On the one hand, DM perceived that the online mode was limited in affording interpersonal contact compared to in-person SA. On the other hand, he confessed that SA online required more ‘concerted effort to bridge the geographical divide’, implying his own effectivities were not sufficient to address the technological limitations if no external support was provided. Limited opportunities for interpersonal interactions resulted in the lack of possible affordances for efficient online interaction (e.g., multimodal features) that were detectable for DM.
- Intentional dynamics. How an individual utilises the resources in the environment is also influenced by the expectations communicated in the environment and the individual’s own aims. Since DM had a strong intention to build interpersonal connections during SA, as well as an expectation of promoting online interaction was communicated in the environment (e.g., help from residential assistants), DM managed to take action and organise online meetings. However, he nevertheless perceived these efforts to be insufficient, since the resources available could not meet DM’s prioritised goal, as explained below.
- Dynamics of intentions. For DM, a salient goal of the SA program was networking and establishing relationships with like-minded global talents all over the world. Therefore, DM prioritised maintaining these relationships, especially in the second semester, when he sought a career related to China. Towards the end of the program, he had to accept that the available resources in the online environment were still limited to meet this goal.
5.2.2. Lack of Empathy in Online Communication
- Individual-environment mutuality. Regarding the affordances-effectivities dual, this example suggests that both the perceived drawbacks of online communication and DM’s lack of abilities in communicating empathy online resulted in his reserved behaviours. DM’s reserved learning behaviours, in turn, became part of the reality of the learning ecology, corresponding with the perception-action dual.
- Intentional dynamics. DM had a strong intention to engage in in-depth discussion, as can be seen from his proactive interactions with professors and his goal for high achievements. However, the expectations communicated by others interacting with DM in the environment did not encourage the in-depth exchange of thoughts. This tension between DM’s own aims and the expectations in the environment led to his reserved attitude in online discussions.
- Dynamics of intentions. As mentioned, DM prioritised interpersonal interactions and exchanges of thought during SA online. However, as the semester progressed he realised that such a goal could not be fully achieved in the online SA environment. This may have resulted in decreased intention to seek in-depth discussion opportunities in the online program.
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Correction Statement
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SA in Person | SA Online | |
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Advantages |
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Disadvantages |
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Journal Entry | Submission Date | SA Mode |
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Entry 1 | 27 September 2019 | In-country |
Entry 2 | 27 October 2019 | In-country |
Entry 3 | 3 December 2019 | In-country |
Entry 4 | 29 December 2019 | In-country |
Entry 5 | 27 January 2020 | Online 1 |
Entry 6 | 2 March 2020 | Online |
Entry 7 | 1 April 2020 | Online |
Entry 8 | 1 May 2020 | Online |
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Tong, P.; Tsung, L.; An, I.S.; Zhou, Y. Sustainable Transition to Studying Abroad Online during the COVID-19 Pandemic: An Ecological Perspective. Sustainability 2022, 14, 16037. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142316037
Tong P, Tsung L, An IS, Zhou Y. Sustainable Transition to Studying Abroad Online during the COVID-19 Pandemic: An Ecological Perspective. Sustainability. 2022; 14(23):16037. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142316037
Chicago/Turabian StyleTong, Peiru, Linda Tsung, Irene Shidong An, and Yijun Zhou. 2022. "Sustainable Transition to Studying Abroad Online during the COVID-19 Pandemic: An Ecological Perspective" Sustainability 14, no. 23: 16037. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142316037
APA StyleTong, P., Tsung, L., An, I. S., & Zhou, Y. (2022). Sustainable Transition to Studying Abroad Online during the COVID-19 Pandemic: An Ecological Perspective. Sustainability, 14(23), 16037. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142316037