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How student perceptions about online learning difficulty influenced their satisfaction during Canada's Covid-19 response.

Colin ConradQi DengIsabelle CaronOksana ShkurskaPaulette SkerrettBinod Sundararajan
Published in: British journal of educational technology : journal of the Council for Educational Technology (2022)
The COVID-19 pandemic has posed a significant challenge to higher education and forced academic institutions across the globe to abruptly shift to remote teaching. Because of the emergent transition, higher education institutions continuously face difficulties in creating satisfactory online learning experiences that adhere to the new norms. This study investigates the transition to online learning during Covid-19 to identify factors that influenced students' satisfaction with the online learning environment. Adopting a mixed-method design, we find that students' experience with online learning can be negatively affected by information overload, and perceived technical skill requirements, and describe qualitative evidence that suggest a lack of social interactions, class format, and ambiguous communication also affected perceived learning. This study suggests that to digitalize higher education successfully, institutions need to redesign students' learning experience systematically and re-evaluate traditional pedagogical approaches in the online context.
Keyphrases
  • health information
  • healthcare
  • social media
  • mental health
  • sars cov
  • quality improvement
  • depressive symptoms
  • high school