Abstract

Conducted against the backdrop of forced online learning imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic, this study sought to explore the learning experiences of accounting student teachers with digitally mediated learning. Anchored in phenomenological research design, focus group interviews were used to generate qualitative data from purposefully selected accounting student teachers while member checking was used for validation. Content analysis of data revealed sufficient concurrence in the phenomenological voices of students that they experienced anxiety, stress, isolation, demotivation and lack of contact with their classmates. In mitigation of these experiences, the study recommends that lecturers need to develop learning material with which students can interact meaningfully, and create and maintain a live, interactive virtual learning environment in which student learning is monitored and evaluated continuously. The students appreciated the flexibility of digitally mediated learning and its provision for real opportunities for learning beyond the physical learning environment. The study found that digitally mediated learning creates a platform for a creative, innovative and non-contact learning environment in the new educational dispensation of the COVID-19 pandemic era. It therefore calls for a radical paradigm shift in the pedagogical assumptions and practices of lecturers towards a student-centred virtual learning environment which thrives on digital technology.

Highlights

  • The concept of digitally mediated learning has received tremendous research attention over the last decade from both a national and a global perspective (Bir, 2019; DeMara et al, 2019, Dube, 2020, Krishnakumar & Rana, 2020; Molise & Dube, 2020; Prynne, 2021; Sintema, 2020)

  • Coupled with the need to prepare for the fourth industrial revolution, this has made the idea of a virtual learning environment and digitally mediated learning very appealing to the current landscape of higher education (DeMara et al, 2019; Macleod et al, 2016)

  • In response to the virtual learning environment imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic, institutions of higher learning globally migrated from traditional contact sessions to digitally mediated learning (Prynne, 2021; Wells, 2020)

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Summary

Introduction

The concept of digitally mediated learning has received tremendous research attention over the last decade from both a national and a global perspective (Bir, 2019; DeMara et al, 2019, Dube, 2020, Krishnakumar & Rana, 2020; Molise & Dube, 2020; Prynne, 2021; Sintema, 2020). The advent of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2019 forced lecturers and institutions of higher learning to be innovative and find ways to keep the education agenda alive while observing the non-pharmaceutical measures provided by the World Health Organization (Prynne, 2021). To this effect, Coughlan (2021) and Sintema (2020) argue that digitally mediated learning emerged as the most practical and realistic approach.

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