University College Students’ Experiences with Online Teaching One Year after COVID-19 Lockdown in Spring 2020
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Results from Quantitative Cluster Analysis (2018–2021)
- (1)
- How do university college students (from different departments and education levels)’s preferences towards online teaching impact their experiences with online teaching during lock down one year after spring 2021?
- (2)
- Do students’ preferences towards “preferred” learning environments (physical/blended/online) have an impact on their self-regulation and learning outcome during the COVID-19 lockdown in 2020?
2. Method
3. Results
- Soc = Study in Social Work;
- Adm = Study of Public Administration;
- Teacher = Study of Education;
- Ped = Study of Pedagogy.
3.1. Assessment of the Academic Material
I learn best through teacher presentations with PowerPoint slides and then work on it myself and then build up. It works best for me. Some teachers are good at doing this. Online has been very different and I have lacked more collection. My learning outcomes have not been good online. The teacher has been afraid to make a presentation and I have lacked good intentions, but it doesn’t work for me.(Anne, Adm.)
Presentation, discussion, collection. Online, it is about the teacher making small presentations with ongoing tasks. I get nothing out of a four-hour presentation.(Jonas, Adm.)
I am curious and happy to discuss how it can be done differently. Some subjects are so exciting that online teaching is okay. Online teaching is best if you have not met your classmates before! I don’t know how I learn bestv.(Emma, Adm.)
It is difficult with teaching where there is a teacher who only talks. It is the same if it were physical education. Here it is essential that there are several activities that affect the relational work—for example when we are quickly thrown into ‘breakout rooms’ with fellow students and have a dialogue with them. Here you can easily forget that you are sitting in a ‘breakout room’ and that they are sitting with a computer somewhere else. The natural dialogue has been one of the most important things about the structure. Our teachers have found that they must have ‘breakout rooms’ and have interaction. It has strengthened my motivation and commitment.(Kim, Teacher)
It is difficult to maintain motivation and stay focused behind a screeI. there is a lack of interaction with other students [..] I have noticed that my engagement has decreased compared to when we had physical education. For me it’s because you’re staring into a screen. There is no movement as there is otherwise in the class and there is not the same dynamic in the discussions that follow.(Henrik, Soc)
I think my learning outcomes are more superficial with online. I got less out of it. Among other things, this has meant that I had to seek a little extra guidance to understand it better.(Henrik, Soc.)
3.2. Space to Reflect on One’s Own Learning Approach and Outcome
Online teaching made room for me to find out what I am good at, because we worked more independently than just in groups all the time [in physical classroom teaching]. Then you can invite in the study group work a little more easily, when you are more aware of what you can contribute yourself. I have found that I must find out how I relate to the material before I avoid collaborating on the material—otherwise my learning will be far too superficial.(Nethe, Soc.)
Before the lockdown there were some from the group who were quite passive, but then they were forced to work more independently and come up with their ideas, thoughts, and suggestions and this has benefited them in the long run.(Nethe, Soc.)
Where I get the most out of it is by reading homework. For teaching, I can expand my understanding, the learning yield is greater if it is a very complicated text and it is only in the application of it, in the discussion of it. Where I get it under my skin is when I read and take notes and must repeat the teaching to cement it.(Ole, Teacher)
I read my text before the lesson and have questions ready and ask the same questions as in physical education. I disturb the teaching a lot.(Alma, Teacher)
I am now better at taking notes—sit down and have focus on the computer, where you sit and look up for physical education. The first few weeks I’m good at it in physical education, and then it slips a little because then I focus up there [on the black board]. You have no other focus in online teaching when you sit and focus. It gives a greater learning benefit because the notes can help in the exam.(Nicole, Ped)
One positive thing about online is that there is not much else to work with. There is not so much side noise or so much else—you can quickly get started with the material. It is positive to be able to isolate a subject when you are sitting away from each other.(Kim, Teacher)
3.3. Flexibility in Online Teaching
The flexibility has been the best thing about online teaching. You can sit at home. You can do other things from time to time, and it is a pleasant atmosphere when you are sitting at home. It works when the teacher just talks from PowerPoint. If you have already built relationships with fellow students and teachers, then it works.(Tove, Soc)
It’s also about flexibility—it’s easy to meet the study group online. In a way, it is not so teaching-related, but more education-related. Study group work works well online. It is both about geography, family relationships and work relationships. Deep learning has been possible in both study group work and in ‘break-out rooms’ in teaching.(Henrik, Soc)
More flexibility in online teaching would be great e.g., asynchronous so you can go on and off. You could get a deadline. Then it could be adapted to other things, e.g., work that was study relevant. For me, flexibility would be more motivating”(Kathrine, Adm)
Compared to the ‘normal’ everyday life, online teaching is more flexible. I live in Kolding and have 40 min to Haderslev. Not having to walk the dog, going to bed earlier to get his sleep. Some illness that makes me unable to show up physically. Get more lessons and get more out of it that way.(Mette, Teacher)
3.4. Lack of Individual Feedback
We have been challenged on feedback in online teaching. Those who don’t say much—how does the teacher know where they are? It’s harder for me to ask follow-up questions online. You can send an email, but it’s not the same.(Lisbeth, Adm)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Learning Outcome | Self-Regulation | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Low Degree of Learning Outcome | High Degree of Learning Outcome | Low Degree of Learning Outcome | High Degree of Learning Outcome | |
Cluster 1: Prefers 100% online teaching | 18.6% | 81.4% | 27.4% | 72.6% |
Cluster 2: Mixed (50/50 physical-online) | 38.8% | 61.2% | 54.6% | 45.4% |
Cluster 3: Prefers physical classroom teaching | 67.0% | 33.0% | 73.1% | 26.9% |
Significance Chi square | <0.001 Cramer’s V = 0.420 (moderate connection) | <0.001 Cramer’s V = 0.390 (moderate connection) |
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Bak, C.K.; Schulin, S. University College Students’ Experiences with Online Teaching One Year after COVID-19 Lockdown in Spring 2020. Soc. Sci. 2023, 12, 156. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12030156
Bak CK, Schulin S. University College Students’ Experiences with Online Teaching One Year after COVID-19 Lockdown in Spring 2020. Social Sciences. 2023; 12(3):156. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12030156
Chicago/Turabian StyleBak, Carsten Kronborg, and Simon Schulin. 2023. "University College Students’ Experiences with Online Teaching One Year after COVID-19 Lockdown in Spring 2020" Social Sciences 12, no. 3: 156. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12030156
APA StyleBak, C. K., & Schulin, S. (2023). University College Students’ Experiences with Online Teaching One Year after COVID-19 Lockdown in Spring 2020. Social Sciences, 12(3), 156. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12030156