Abstract

In March 2020, universities in China transitioned to online education in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and intensified the focus on collaboration in online learning. However, little is known about the impact of undertaking online collaborative learning (OCL) on student teachers’ views about the process and about their own teaching and learning. This qualitative study examined 18 student teachers’ views about their experience of OCL and the way it affected them as learners and future teachers. The participants reported that OCL helped them develop varied views of learning and had a positive effect on their views about the future use of OCL. They saw their personal experience of OCL as an important aspect of their development as teachers. These findings highlight ways that online learning can shape the views and professionalism of student teachers. Future teacher training programs can provide OCL as a teaching experience at an early stage to help transform student teachers’ self-understanding from that of a student to that of a teacher. The findings of this study further reveal that online collaborative teacher training offers student teachers an opportunity to collaborate, discuss, and reflect on their professional development as teachers. This encourages teacher educators to reconsider how new forms of practice and teaching theories can be woven together more effectively in post-COVID teacher training.

Highlights

  • The COVID-19 crisis has brought about rapid changes in education worldwide

  • The student teachers identified the flexibility of online collaborative learning (OCL) as one of its unique features that offer “greater control of learning for students” (e.g., ST4 and ST16)

  • Student self-regulation was another aspect of OCL that the students believed would be difficult for them to manage as teachers because they had struggled with it themselves: Sometimes I was frustrated at my inability to maintain self-regulation in OCL

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Summary

Introduction

The COVID-19 crisis has brought about rapid changes in education worldwide. The consequences of the crisis may take time to become fully apparent, but will potentially have strong impacts (la Velle et al, 2020). The transfer to online education has challenged teacher education (Murphy, 2020). The need to prepare student teachers to work in complex settings seems to be more crucial than ever as the world faces the current COVID-19 global pandemic (Flores, 2020). In China, universities transferred teacher training exclusively to online delivery. To effectively carry out online education, the Ministry of Education (MoE, 2020)

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