Aspects of Distance Education in Combination with Home Offices
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- The scope, which covered all academics, students and fields of study;
- The distance form was implemented exclusively, i.e., verification and evaluation of students, processing the study agenda, etc.;
- Change of the transition to the distance form was in the order of days;
- The home office regime applied to all academics (also to other staff providing educational support).
- Online, real time. For example, streaming via MS Teams, Zoom, etc.;
- Online, with time independent study materials. For example, pre-recorded video;
- Hybrid, at the same time face to face and online, real time or online, time free;
- Online, real time for students with special needs.
- The necessity to have adequate technical and software equipment;
- The need for a quality internet connection;
- The need to have the same data available at home as in the university environment;
- Sufficient knowledge to use technologies that support home office work and teaching process applications.
- Take into account the experience of teachers in improving education in general (pedagogical factors);
- Remove negative factors limiting education (technical-organizational factors, e.g., replacement of writing on classic whiteboards);
- Introduce long-term measures to support online distance learning at all levels of management and in all relevant areas.
2. Literature Review and Methods
2.1. Recent Studies Analysis
2.2. Methods Used
- RA1. What is the technical equipment necessary in the home office? Do academics have the hardware needed for real time online learning?
- RA2. What is the availability of software equipment for academics and students?
- RA3. What is the level of access to work data in home offices? Do academics have equal access to working data in home office compared with the normal mode of operation when they are present in the workplace?
- RA4. What is the quality of the internet connection? Does the quality of the internet connection limit real time teaching?
- RA5. To what extent has the transition to full-fledged online education been implemented (according to the teaching elements applied in online teaching process)?
- RA6. Specification of the most common problems, any further notes, and ideas.
3. Survey Analysis Conducted in the Spring and Its Evaluation
3.1. Quantitative Analysis
3.1.1. RA1. Technical Equipment
- 10% of respondents reported insufficient technical equipment (5% hardware quality and 5% missing hardware, equipment specially designed for teaching);
- 3% of respondents reported a scanner as missing hardware;
- 6% of respondents mentioned a missing printer (needing to print selected materials with regard to their study, preference to work with the printed version).
3.1.2. RA2. Software Equipment
- 5% of respondents said that they lacked certain software (limited-use, licensed software);
- A fundamental problem that was diagnosed on the basis of a questionnaire survey was the answer to the question “Do you know about the possibility of running some programs in the form of remote access?”. A total of 29% of respondents said they did not know about this option, and 14% of respondents knew about it but could not use it. Again, this situation is caused by a lack of information about the possibilities and features that the IT infrastructure of the faculty offers.
3.1.3. RA3. Data Availability
- The results showed that only 11% of respondents stored data on a desktop computer to which they did not have access from home. At the same time, these users stored data on portable devices. Therefore, data availability problems were not identified;
- 55% of academics had a portable computer on which they stored data and had access to. This hardware was also equipped for audiovisual needs;
- 3% of respondents reported a confusing answer when they reported a different location where they stored data and other storage to which they had access. However, they did not report a problem with data access.
3.1.4. RA4. Internet Quality
3.1.5. RA5. The Scope of the Transition to Full-fledged Distance Online Education.
- 47.5% of respondents used LMS and traditional materials (presentation, pdf, etc.) only with added elements such as material links, comments, and individual tasks;
- 12% of respondents used LMS, traditional materials and video recordings of lectures—partial replacement of full-time teaching;
- 40.5% of respondents used LMS, traditional materials, and real time video lectures and communication—maximum possible substitution of full-time education with the help of IT tools.
3.1.6. RA6. Discussion—Problems, Suggestions and Comments.
- 15% of respondents reported their requirements for better support, e.g., information, instructions, documentation;
- 8% of respondents stated a lack of information as a problem, although this information was available (intranet, information emails, and other standard communication channels);
- 43% of respondents did not use the opportunity to write a comment, problem, or suggestion.
- The problem is the lack or inadequate forms of support, e.g., documentation, tutorials, manuals, etc. The documentation is divided and available in several places and in different formats (texts, videos, pages), which complicates the search;
- Absence of coordination and unification of the teaching process;
- Online learning cannot fully represent the direct contact between students and teachers. Some courses require practical demonstrations that are difficult to implement online, and interaction with students is also important. Non-verbal communication is often reduced in online education; for example, when a teacher does not see how students respond to a lecture topic and how they understand it. Additionally, the interaction with students in online learning is more complicated—some students tend not to ask and attend only as described in reference [16], dealing with teaching using a teleconferencing system.
4. Discussion and Practical Recommendations
4.1. Further Experience Associated with Online Teaching in the Winter Semester 2020/2021
- Awareness of the current situation and study instructions remained a key issue. This is especially true for first-year students, for whom the university environment and way of studying was new;
- For many students, distance learning has become “common” and they underestimated the situation. Some students joined classes outside the home, and interaction with them was severely limited; some students registered for teaching from mobile phones, which then reduces the quality of teaching, especially in courses where students have to work with software tools, etc.;
- It is possible to state there is a general reluctance for voice communication and a preference for the written form—in real time chat applications. It transpires that students who have to answer a question in the virtual environment of MS Teams do not use a microphone, but answer in a chat. If the teacher has a PowerPoint presentation, for example, he does not see the chat in the MS Teams environment. In this case, he must end the presentation, enter the chat, and then continue the presentation. The solution is two monitors, where one displays the study environment (such as MS Teams), and the other is used to present the curriculum;
- In the case of the teacher cooperating with another university (e.g., as a visiting professor), if both institutions use the same means of communication—for example, Teams—parallel work can be complicated. MS Teams does not allow users to be logged in under two accounts at the same time, so in this situation it is necessary to constantly log in/out and the teacher is not “online” for the other institution. Working in Teams may be complicated in terms of a different software settings in both institutions;
- Interaction and involvement of students is different from in-contact teaching—in most groups, there are several students who respond and have questions, others are usually passive;
- Some students do not have computers with the latest hardware at home and are therefore forced to use older versions of some software resources, even though they have school licenses for new versions available (for example, Office, due to the fact that newer versions cannot run on old hardware). This problem would not arise at all in the case of contact teaching in computer classrooms at school.
4.2. A Comprehensive Approach to Solutions
- Pressure to digitize processes related to the teaching process (study agenda, electronic documentation, etc.);
- Software to support the study agenda and teaching (e.g., LMS, workflow, communication);
- IT equipment on the part of end users (orientation to portable devices);
- Pedagogical readiness of courses (provision of teaching materials, know-how of preparation of teaching aids);
- Readiness of software used in teaching (for example, some students use Apple devices and may have trouble using some standard programs);
- Equipment of the organization for creating materials and support for their preparation (hardware, software, manuals, staffing);
- The overall concept of study organization, including the implementation of student testing, credits, and exams.
- Help Desk function for managing specific requirements for non-standard periods (technical problems with online teaching, ignorance of procedures);
- Information management (within existing systems and communication channels);
- Define and manage study affairs processes;
- Define and manage educational processes;
- Establish the process of supporting the creation of teaching materials.
4.3. Related Areas to Solve
4.3.1. Area of Education
- Location from which the teaching is realized—from a university or faculty versus from home (home office);
- Support required for the implementation of teaching; with or without the support of specialists;
- Time aspect. Is this a teaching in real time or time-independent teaching? Generally, the preparation of materials whose use is time-independent;
- Students. Is it necessary to take into account students with special needs? Where are the students from? Different geographic locations may occur in different time zones;
- Software needed for education. In addition to the infrastructure platform for teaching (LMS, online communication), the availability of software related to teaching (graphics, statistics, modeling software, etc.) should also be considered.
4.3.2. Area of Information
- Availability;
- Understandability;
- Currency.
4.3.3. Area of Management
4.4. Limitations of Work
4.5. Summary
5. Conclusions
- Total technical equipment is sufficient. The advantage is equipping staff and students with portable computers. There were indications that there was a lack of equipment to support a specific pedagogical process (e.g., boards);
- Overall software availability is sufficient. Applications for creating a virtual learning environment are available;
- The problem is the lack of or inadequate form of support, e.g., documentation, tutorials, manuals, etc.
- Strong tendency of academics to use other solutions from recommended ones (especially in the area of communication with students).
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Rozehnal, P.; Danel, R. Aspects of Distance Education in Combination with Home Offices. Information 2021, 12, 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/info12020075
Rozehnal P, Danel R. Aspects of Distance Education in Combination with Home Offices. Information. 2021; 12(2):75. https://doi.org/10.3390/info12020075
Chicago/Turabian StyleRozehnal, Petr, and Roman Danel. 2021. "Aspects of Distance Education in Combination with Home Offices" Information 12, no. 2: 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/info12020075
APA StyleRozehnal, P., & Danel, R. (2021). Aspects of Distance Education in Combination with Home Offices. Information, 12(2), 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/info12020075