Experiences of Academics Working from Home during COVID-19: A Qualitative View from Selected South African Universities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Theoretical Underpinnings of the Study
2. Work from Home: Understanding the Concept in Academia
3. Methodology
4. Findings and Discussion
4.1. Experiences of Virtualisation and Home Working among Academics
4.2. Negative Experiences and Attitudes
“One of my first challenges was how to complete the semester with a transition to online learning whilst students and myself and my family were all dealing with massive change, anxiety, unknown and constantly shifting expectations and circumstances as my institutions tried to figure their way through which did not always match with my own ideas about how to make things work.”
“There are positive and negative aspects I would like to point out from working from home. The positive aspects are work flexibility, closeness to the family, comfort, maximising the use of technology and better productivity. The negatives are overworking without breaks, background noise of TVs and vacuum cleaners, less interaction with colleagues and students as well as monotony of work.”
4.3. Positive Experiences and Attitudes
“…refreshing, no longer commuting—great savings in petrol usage—being able to start work a little later (no early to wake time), better eating and sleeping schedule and of course shorter hours.”
4.4. Challenges Faced by Academics Working from Home
4.4.1. Inability to Adapt
“I will not say I have fully adjusted, but I am gradually beginning to realise that it is a new normal that may remain with us for a long time.”
“the need to change during times of psychological stress and anxiety associated with the pandemic was a challenge.”
4.4.2. Lack of a Home Office
“I am not blessed with a home office and initially for several months worked from my dining room table (the chairs were not made for such usage). Recently I had since shifted things to my second bedroom (having had to first get rid of some of the clutter there) I am currently on the hunt for a comfortable office chair!”
4.4.3. Loneliness and Isolation
“I missed interacting with my students face-to-face on campus. I also missed the use of the vast amount of research resources physically present on campus.”
4.4.4. Inability to Balance Family and Work
“...an initial challenge was balancing attention for home, children, and work. I’ve had to find patterns that mean that sometimes work slacks, and sometimes my family is negatively impacted. With my kids, we relied heavily on screentime to be able to get space to work.”
4.5. Improving Satisfaction with Work from Home
5. Implications
5.1. Practical Implications
5.2. Theoretical Implications
6. Conclusions, Recommendations, and Limitations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- How did you feel about working from home?a. Was there a home office?
- What challenges did you foresee and how have you tried to surmount them?
- How are things going right now? Have you fully adjusted?
- How do you see yourself fitting in moving forward?
- In every aspect of working virtually as an academic, what do you propose is necessary to ensure that you can run with the idea of a virtual office?
- Any other thoughts you may have on this mammoth and seemingly difficulty way of working.
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Participants’ HEI | Male | Female |
---|---|---|
Private | 7 | 3 |
Public | 6 | 2 |
How Did You Feel About Working from Home? | Coding |
---|---|
Well, it was mixed feeling. One part of me saying, wow, this is an opportunity to explore a new way of working without necessarily tied to office routine while the other part was the challenge of adopting to a method that was completely unprepared for. |
|
The first hard lockdown was challenging. I found myself spending more time focused on work and being available for students and family at the same time. As burnout was about to hit, I realised that I needed to slow down and stick to ‘office’ hours. |
|
It was sometimes a challenge with managing home life with children and online schooling. It was a challenge dealing with constant change and unknowns. |
|
Initially it was refreshing, no long commute (great savings in petrol usage), being able to start work a little later (no early to wake time), better eating and sleep schedule and off course shorter hours. the longer we ‘stayed’ things became problematic. Having to learn software programs was daunting! (annoying). |
|
Working from home was not pleasant. Most domestic chores I would have ignored if I am working from office had to be done by me. |
|
Working from home allowed more flexibility; creativity and early morning focused. In one hand, family members enjoyed my presence. In the other hand, I was overwhelmed by their excessive demands |
|
Working from home is very productive, there are no distraction. |
|
experienced social isolation during the lockdown period in 2020. working from home has led to a decline in productivity and some health challenges. |
|
I was very happy at the opportunity to work from home. This is because the location of my place of work is very far from where my family resides. working from home afforded me the opportunity to stay with my family. |
|
Takes away the hustle of waking up too early and to drive to work, and when I get there, I need a few more minutes to relax before I start working. Additionally, there are other employees disturbing productivity. |
|
Working at home comes with mixed feelings. |
|
I felt safe working from home. |
|
There are positive and negative aspects I would like to point out from working from home. The positive aspects are work flexibility, closeness to the family, comfort, maximising the use of technology and better productivity. The negatives are overworking without breaks, background noise of TVs and vacuum cleaners, less interaction with colleagues and students as well as monotony of work. |
|
Challenge for us to adapt completely to this new way of working. |
|
I have been stuck at home since 15 March 2020 due to the pandemic. it was a little difficult because of technological issues. But those issues were quickly resolved by the college IT department and the classes went forward with minimal problems. I am conflicted about the experience. I missed interacting with my students face-to-face on campus. I also missed the use of the vast amount of research resources physically present on campus. |
|
Wonderful. Do not have to drive to the office. |
|
Initially, I had a little trouble condition reduces the opportunity to understand the characteristics and personality of each student. Work becomes easier, faster, more effective, and efficient. |
|
At the beginning, it was very extraordinary and fun, but starting at week 6, the student response decreased. |
|
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Share and Cite
Iwu, C.G.; Okeke-Uzodike, O.E.; Anwana, E.; Iwu, C.H.; Esambe, E.E. Experiences of Academics Working from Home during COVID-19: A Qualitative View from Selected South African Universities. Challenges 2022, 13, 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/challe13010016
Iwu CG, Okeke-Uzodike OE, Anwana E, Iwu CH, Esambe EE. Experiences of Academics Working from Home during COVID-19: A Qualitative View from Selected South African Universities. Challenges. 2022; 13(1):16. https://doi.org/10.3390/challe13010016
Chicago/Turabian StyleIwu, Chux Gervase, Obianuju E. Okeke-Uzodike, Emem Anwana, Charmaine Helena Iwu, and Emmanuel Ekale Esambe. 2022. "Experiences of Academics Working from Home during COVID-19: A Qualitative View from Selected South African Universities" Challenges 13, no. 1: 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/challe13010016
APA StyleIwu, C. G., Okeke-Uzodike, O. E., Anwana, E., Iwu, C. H., & Esambe, E. E. (2022). Experiences of Academics Working from Home during COVID-19: A Qualitative View from Selected South African Universities. Challenges, 13(1), 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/challe13010016