How to Keep University Active during COVID-19 Pandemic: Experience from Slovakia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Identification of persons contaminated by coronavirus by the development and application of a wide array of diagnostics, varying from temperature measurement up to detection of coronavirus by PCR tests.
- Restriction of personal contacts to reduce chances of contamination among people, groups of people, areas, and countries (legislative limitation of population movement between countries and regions, and restriction, or full prohibition, of contacts in the working and leisure time or meeting points such as factories, offices, schools, restaurants, bars, discotheques, and others).
- Measures for personal safety (keeping reasonable individual distance between people, wearing face masks and gloves, hand wash and disinfection, and others).
- Development and application of vaccines against COVID-19 and subsequent testing their safety and efficiency.
- Education, information, and agitation of people to participate and support these measures.
- Promotion of international solidarity and cooperation in the implementation of these measures.
2. Methodology
3. Impact of COVID-19 on University Activities
- To provide higher education and training for top professionals in a country’s industry, agriculture, science, culture, and local offices authorities, as well as for education experts at different school levels. University education includes not only professional education, but also ethical, language, communication, and sport training and development of the students’ abilities, as well as their research skills.
- To conduct basic and applied research, develop national and international science by recruiting university and out-of-university staff and university students, and ensuring scientific cooperation with national and international organizations (universities, research institutes, agencies, and other research bodies, industrial, agricultural, social, and other related organizations).
3.1. COVID-19 Impact on Teaching
- prohibition of presence of all students in the premises of the university and in student’s dormitories—it was suggested to both domestic and foreign students that they leave and stay at home;
- obligatory online education for both undergraduate and postgraduate students;
- cancellation of any mobilities of students and teachers with domestic and foreign universities;
- restriction of PhD students and the university staff presence in the premises of the university. Such presence was allowed only for the key persons necessary for university governance, technical services, and the experimental studies which require personal presence of PhD students or scientists in the university offices/laboratories. These persons were obliged to follow measures towards personal safety (wearing face masks, personal distance, minimization of contacts with other persons, disinfection of hands and rooms, and others). Other employees were ordered to work from home (home-office). In some cases, these persons were provided with notebooks and other equipment necessary for the paperwork at home;
- permission to enter the university building only to persons with negative results of either immunological or PCR test for COVID-19.
3.2. COVID-19 Impact on Research
- Complication and in some cases even breaking off supply with material and consumables for research. For example, biology experts had to cancel biomedical experiments on rats, which should have been delivered from abroad, and in vitro experiments on organs, which they were receiving from slaughterhouses and hospitals, which stopped, restricted, or changed their ordinary activities due to the pandemic. Even the supply of books from abroad has been complicated and prolonged (for example, the publisher sent copies of a book from the US to its author in Slovakia via express delivery firm, which guaranteed their arrival within 3 days, but the deadline was not met; waiting time for their delivery has been prolonged for more than one month);
- The pandemic also negatively affected domestic public transport and the hotel services—the number of transport connections was reduced, some bus and train lines and accommodation in hotels and student dormitories were cancelled. This greatly complicated travel and accommodation within our country, and thus the implementation of experiments and any personal contacts with university partners outside its location;
- Research activities at the university headquarters were also complicated, as students and PhD students involved in carrying out this research lost their accommodation in student dormitories that were closed due to the pandemic. Therefore, in order to participate in research activities, experiments, and analyses on university premises, they had to look for alternative (private) accommodation;
- The damage caused by the COVID-19 pandemic has also been evident at the level of international scientific cooperation. The pandemic has dramatically reduced or prevented international travel and border crossings, even within the EU. As a result of this situation, it was necessary to cancel personal participation in conferences, workshops, and other events, and scholarship study and research stays at foreign universities, even if they were previously planned, approved, and financially supported. If the implementation of research activities was agreed, and funds were allocated to them before the start of the pandemic, these activities had to be reduced or adjusted so that specific research activities and analyses could be carried out, not jointly, but separately, in domestic countries of universities isolated by COVID-19.
3.3. COVID-19 Impact on UKF Cooperation with Embassy Representatives Accredited in Slovakia
- participation of ambassadors in important cultural and social events organized by UKF;
- visits of ambassadors of various countries paid to the Rector of UKF followed by a lecture for students;
- organization of socio-cultural activities and events by individual embassies on the university premises;
- ambassadors’ patronage of the university scientific events (conferences);
- embassies assistance in establishing contacts and cooperation with the management of the relevant country’s universities;
- cooperation with ambassadors on international projects.
- Participation of Spanish Ambassador, H. E. Luis Belzuz de los Ríos, in an interesting event, Erasmus Village 2019, organized by UKF and Slovak University of Agriculture for foreign students;
- Participation of the Ambassadors of Germany (H. E. Joachim Bleikert), Slovenia (H. E. Gregor Kozovinc) and Serbia (H. E. Momčilo Babič) in the international conference Religiosity, Spirituality and Alternative Religious Movements, organized by the Department of Religious Studies on 27 November 2019 at UKF in Nitra. The output was the proceedings of an international conference of Religiosity, Spirituality and Alternative Religious Movements Peter Kondrla (ed.) Nitra 2020 with interesting contributions;
- Other interesting events were, for example, Canada-Day (Chargé d’Affaires John von Kaufmann), the Indonesian exhibition: Unity in Diversity (H. E. Adiyatwidi Adiwoso), the concert of the group Las Cuatro Estaciones (Ambassador of Chile, H. E. Gloria Navarette) and the traveling exhibition Strangers to Citizens organized on the university premises by the Ambassador of Ireland, H. E. Hildegard Ó Riain.
3.4. COVID-19 Impact on Academic Exchange along ERASMUS+
Erasmus+ Mobilities
3.5. COVID-19 Impact on International Cooperation
3.5.1. Selected Examples of Interuniversity Cooperation
3.5.2. Selected Examples of Interuniversity Cooperation
3.5.3. Selected Publication Outputs of UKF Staff with Foreign Researchers
3.5.4. International Conferences
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Respondents/Acivity | Attitudes to Impact of COVID-19 to Their Research, Study, Mobilities, Working on Projects, etc. | ||
---|---|---|---|
- | No (%, abs.) | I Can’t Judge (%, abs.) | Yes (%, abs.) |
Students (including lectures, mobilities) | 77 (385) | 11.6 (58) | 11.4 (57) |
Employees - teachers (research, mobilities) | 60 (60) | 20 (20) | 20 (20) |
Erasmus Mobility | 2016/2017 | 2017/2018 | 2018/2019 |
---|---|---|---|
Incoming student mobility | 26 | 35 | 44 |
Incoming employee mobility | 55 | 95 | 77 |
Outgoing student mobility | 156 | 145 | 182 |
Outgoing employee mobility | 96 | 131 | 165 |
Erasmus Mobility | 2019/2020 |
---|---|
Outgoing student mobility during COVID-19 (affected by the mobility pandemic) | 94 |
Outgoing student mobility during COVID-19 (who stayed during a pandemic on their Erasmus mobility) | 33 |
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Pavlíková, M.; Sirotkin, A.; Králik, R.; Petrikovičová, L.; Martin, J.G. How to Keep University Active during COVID-19 Pandemic: Experience from Slovakia. Sustainability 2021, 13, 10350. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131810350
Pavlíková M, Sirotkin A, Králik R, Petrikovičová L, Martin JG. How to Keep University Active during COVID-19 Pandemic: Experience from Slovakia. Sustainability. 2021; 13(18):10350. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131810350
Chicago/Turabian StylePavlíková, Martina, Alexander Sirotkin, Roman Králik, Lucia Petrikovičová, and José García Martin. 2021. "How to Keep University Active during COVID-19 Pandemic: Experience from Slovakia" Sustainability 13, no. 18: 10350. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131810350
APA StylePavlíková, M., Sirotkin, A., Králik, R., Petrikovičová, L., & Martin, J. G. (2021). How to Keep University Active during COVID-19 Pandemic: Experience from Slovakia. Sustainability, 13(18), 10350. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131810350