Faculty and Student Perspectives on Online Learning in Higher Education
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- What were the experiences of university faculty and students in online learning during the 2021–2022 academic year?
- What are their perceptions of sustainable teaching strategies for future higher education?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Interpretive Paradigm
2.2. Participants
2.3. Interview Protocols
2.4. Data Collection and Data Analysis
2.5. Trustworthiness of Interpretation
2.6. A Search for Meaning
I needed to record our Zoom meetings, but how I make that recording accessible to all the students was a challenge for me. I remember my first recording, I spent about two or three hours in order to convert it.
I am sure nearly 90% of my students don’t ever turn their cameras on. So I’m talking to little person icons. There’s no face to look at. I can go all semester without ever actually talking to a student, without ever seeing their face. Some of them don’t even turn their mics on, they just type in the chat. So I never hear their voice. It’s like, am I just talking to blank air?
I had students have their cameras on. So you know, they would be in their dorm room, and people would be coming in, and they would be talking to them, and then dogs and cats, you know, they were babysitting, or had their kids at home. There was all kinds of stuff going on in the background, you know, yeah, television, radio, whatever. So they were much more distracted.
I think some of it is because the students we have now, especially the freshmen and sophomores, you know, missed their senior years in high school. So they are very immature, a lot of them are not prepared for college at all, they are far from being self-disciplined, and it’s just been exacerbated because of learning online.
I felt a lot of isolation. I couldn’t meet my peers in person and talk. I used to go out after class with my classmates, we would go out to eat and drink and stuff like that. But we couldn’t really do that now because we don’t meet in person. So a lot of those social things that we used to do were not existing anymore.
I noticed there was much less willingness to participate. I always had my students keep their cameras on, and they could be doing anything. So you don’t even know, they would be in their dorm room; people would be coming in and they would be talking to them, and then dogs and cats, you know, there was all kinds of stuff going on in the background, so they were much more distracted and less engaged. I think they can be much more focused in an actual classroom, when they are face to face, and they can’t get away with much. (Dr. C)
I would say it depends on individual learning styles. Some of my students presented they prefer in person, and online is not the way they can learn meaningfully. Most of them, however, reacted positively in online classes. At first, it was challenging, and they were a little bit scared, and not confident, but little by little, we got most of the students comfortable with that kind of setting, and they engaged well. But still, we had some students who were not comfortable and said they would rather to go in person.
Class participation decreased. I think it was because relationships were hard to establish online. The dynamics are different. I held back a lot, you know. I think people communicate a lot through facial expressions, body language, you know, all kinds of stuff that you read people, and when it’s on Zoom, you’re only seeing a headshot, you know. Am I gonna say something wrong? Am I gonna offend you? So yeah, I’ve noticed that difference. I myself interacted very differently in person and online. (R)
I think a lot of it has to do with what we would call classroom management, you know, teaching students how to be in an online environment. I really think our students, in order for them to really get the most out of their online classroom, they need some training. How to be in an online class, where to set up your equipment, how to isolate yourself so that you’re not being distracted, how to use your camera, use the chat room, how to engage, how to participate by raising your hand in Zoom, or you know, whatever else the professor once wants you to do. I think students really need to be trained in terms of technology and online etiquette.
One of the adjustments I made was to create a situation that the line of communication was as strong as it was in person. So I had, for example, 24 h a day of open phone, anytime students could contact me. I gave them my personal phone number, my cell phone, so they had that opportunity. I invited them to communicate with me anytime via email. I also invited them if they wanted to talk with me via Zoom one on one. They had this opportunity. So, one important thing was keeping the line of communication open, because students may encounter any types of issues and they need your support and timely help.
I feel like a lot of the limitations now are not the software, it’s like the physical space of the person taking the class, or you know, the time zone issue, or the inability to actually collaborate on the same thing, like, you know, be sitting next to somebody at the table and working on the same thing with them, you know. There might be a place for virtual reality or things like that in there eventually, if that becomes more commonplace, that everybody can just meet up in, you know, meta verse, or whatever it is, that may eventually fill some of that, though it’s still not the same.
After we went online, the work, oh, I’ll say the biggest frustration for me was the work became easier, the difficulty of the work fell off a cliff and assignments became monotonous very quickly, because the professor was less invested in challenging students. So I got super frustrated because I felt like my education was being devalued and I was demotivated.
The professor was just like an idea. They were persons, I’m sure somewhere, but they were more like an idea. And they’re like, alright, I’m the professor. Here are the seven videos I made for you for next class. Good luck. It felt like I was all on my own, very lonely and isolated.
3. Discussion
3.1. Challenges Encountered
3.2. Student Engagement
4. Strategies to Improve the Effectiveness of Online Learning
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Name | Gender | Age | Years of Teaching | Years of Online Teaching | Type of Institution | Survey Total Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dr. SC | F | Over 45 | 40 years | 13 years | 4-year Private | 161 |
Dr. RP | M | Over 45 | 25 years | 2 years | 4-year Public | 156 |
Prof. SD | F | Over 45 | 20 years | 1 year | Community | 168 |
Dr. KC | M | 41–45 | 15 years | 0 year | 4-year Public | 147 |
Dr. KI | M | 41–45 | 10 years | 0 year | 4-year Private | 130 |
Miss RA | F | 36–40 | 7 years | 3 years | Community | 151 |
Dr. HR | F | 30–35 | 6 years | 2 years | 4-year Public | 136 |
Dr. KK | M | 30–35 | 2 years | 0 year | 4-year Public | 166 |
Name | Gender | Age | Education Level | Online Learning Experience | Type of Institution | Survey Total Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
VR | F | Over 35 | Ph.D. | 3 online courses | 4-year Public | 186 |
WH | M | Over 35 | Master’s | Some online learning | 4-year Public | 191 |
EG | Non-binary | 30–35 | Master | 5 online courses | 4-year Private | 66 |
SC | F | 24–29 | Ph.D. | 2 online courses | 4-year Private | 183 |
RN | M | 18–23 | Senior | 2 online courses | 4-year Public | 155 |
SL | F | 18–23 | Junior | None | 4-year Private | 142 |
AF | F | 18–23 | Freshman | None | Community | 128 |
HH | F | 18–23 | Freshman | None | Community | 50 |
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Yan, M.; Pourdavood, R.G. Faculty and Student Perspectives on Online Learning in Higher Education. Educ. Sci. 2024, 14, 801. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14080801
Yan M, Pourdavood RG. Faculty and Student Perspectives on Online Learning in Higher Education. Education Sciences. 2024; 14(8):801. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14080801
Chicago/Turabian StyleYan, Meng, and Roland Ghollam Pourdavood. 2024. "Faculty and Student Perspectives on Online Learning in Higher Education" Education Sciences 14, no. 8: 801. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14080801
APA StyleYan, M., & Pourdavood, R. G. (2024). Faculty and Student Perspectives on Online Learning in Higher Education. Education Sciences, 14(8), 801. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14080801