Abstract

Objectives: The goal of the present study is to describe how the transition to remote emergency delivery was addressed in three universities during the COVID-19 pandemic, to determine the satisfaction levels of their students and faculty with this new teaching-learning experience, and to gather their opinions about the future of higher education. Method: The study uses a mixed-methods approach, including faculty and student surveys and focus groups Results: The study shows high satisfaction with the emergency remote delivery and clearly reflects the relevance of enhancing the digital components of future learning experiences in higher education and a unanimous preference for hybrid education. Participants provide recommendations to institutions regarding what students and faculty would like to keep for a more effective learning experience when the new normal comes. Conclusions: COVID-19 has had terrible consequences; however, the pandemic has brought along some positive effects and improvement opportunities in higher education, and, if the results of the present study are any indication, the future of face-to-face higher education should be hybrid. Implication for Theory and/or Practice: The study results can provide recommendations and inform decision-making by institutional leaders and policy makers regarding the necessary enhancement of the digital component of the teaching and learning process in higher education.

Highlights

  • The COVID-19 pandemic has caused a global crisis of an unprecedented nature

  • COVID-19 has had terrible consequences; the pandemic has brought along some positive effects and improvement opportunities in higher education, and, if the results of the present study are any indication, the future of face-to-face higher education should be hybrid

  • Implication for Theory and/or Practice: The study results can provide recommendations and inform decision-making by institutional leaders and policy makers regarding the necessary enhancement of the digital component of the teaching and learning process in higher education

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The COVID-19 pandemic has caused a global crisis of an unprecedented nature. We have seen most of the pillars of modern society being affected. The guiding principles of economies, health systems, human interactions, and education, and their rules and established forms have been transformed to a degree that it is hard to imagine how any of them would ever go back to what they were before. In the case of education, technology has been the protagonist. Physical campuses have been closed for months and many universities have been able to continue to serve students online only because of the level of global connectivity and the extraordinary development that educational technology has reached. These scholars all over the world, some of them hesitant until now, have had to experience a new mode of academic delivery

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call