Abstract

The article describes observations from the online teaching of a robotics class during the COVID-19 pandemic caused by SARS-CoV-2, also known as the coronavirus. The changes in the course structure and in the provided material lead to an unexpected increase in the grade performance of the students. The article provides a description and an analysis of the effects and their possible causes. In addition to a grade-performance analysis, further data from a university-wide and from a course-specific survey are used. The analysis of the effects and their possible causes is furthermore discussed in relation to the educational research literature. Some evidence for the general findings is provided, which are of interest for online teaching or blended learning in general, respectively, for teaching in robotics and related areas. These include some evidence for the benefits of asynchronous online teaching and for the role of social interaction, which may happen in self-organized, smaller peer groups, even without the intervention of the instructor. The findings and the extensive pointers to the literature can also provide useful guidelines for instructors of robotics courses when considering the use of online or blended teaching in the future beyond the COVID-19 pandemic.

Highlights

  • The World Health Organization (WHO) declared the COVID-19 outbreak to be a global pandemic on 11 March 2020 [1]

  • A one-way Analysis Of Variance (ANOVA) of grades by year showed a significant main effect for the exam year, namely F(3, 117) = 10.21, p < 0.001, i.e., there is a pronounced F-value for the critical value p < 0.001, a − 1 = 3 effect degrees of freedom, and N − a = 117 error degrees of freedom

  • Students achieved a better grade performance compared to previous years, and there were indicators for high approval rates for the way the course was taught

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Summary

Introduction

The World Health Organization (WHO) declared the COVID-19 outbreak to be a global pandemic on 11 March 2020 [1]. The article presents possible explanations for this observation including data and discussions with reference to the educational literature. It provides some guidelines for possible positive elements that can be taken into account for online education in robotics and related disciplines. The article makes the following two main contributions It provides indications in the spirit of evidence-based education [9,10] using proper data analyses, which can be further used in, e.g., meta-studies to identify general trends.

The Content of the Robotics Course
Syllabus
Spring 2020 Version during the COVID-19 Pandemic
Analysis of Grade Distributions
Student Experience Survey by Jacobs University
1: More flexible schedule 2: Promotion of self-discipline and responsibility 3
1: Stronger need to self-organize 2: Lack of routine hampers productivity 3
Students’ Perception in Course-Specific Self-Reporting
Response Rate
Comparison to Other Forms of Instruction
Amount of Usage of Different Forms of Study Material
Interaction among Students and with the Instructor
Use of Textbooks
External Material from the WWW
The Timing of Self-Studies
The Role of Reminder Emails
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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