Abstract

COVID-19 pandemic triggered distance education in higher education. Decisions such as isolation, social distancing and quarantine made by countries unexpectedly and suddenly forced face-to-face education to change to distance education within days. All academics around the world had to move online overnight. All the educational and academic activities in higher education (courses, exams, meetings, etc.) had to be conducted online in a few days. Based on these changes, this study aimed to analyze the relationships among student, faculty (adaptations of faculty members to distance education) and institutional (distance learning capacities of the universities) variables that affected satisfaction of the students related to distance education in higher education institutions in Turkey during COVID-19 pandemic using hierarchical linear modeling (HLM). The study group included 14,962 students and 3631 academics from 30 universities. The results showed that universities with higher distance education capacities got higher satisfaction scores. HLM analysis showed that 43% of the variation in satisfaction scores resulted from universities. The second HLM analysis showed that 44% of the overall satisfaction score variance of the students could be explained by the factors of university features (Level 2: distance education capacity and acceptance and use of distance education systems of faculty members). Thus, it was determined that 44% of the university factor calculated as 43% in Model 1 (which is calculated within students’ general satisfaction scores) resulted from the distance education capacity and the acceptance and use of distance education systems of faculty members. The findings of this study provide insights to improve distance education by stakeholders of higher education institutions.

Highlights

  • On December 31st, 2019, China reported the discovery of a new type of coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) pneumonia-like infection to the World Health Organization (WHO) inWuhan, which caused serious illnesses and death (Yuan et al, 2020)

  • Participants The population of the study consists of 2,348,535 undergraduate students studying at 195 universities in Turkey and 150,343 academics who work in these universities

  • Internet access providers that students use to attend their distance education lessons were presented below (Graph 1b.). 12,460 (83.3%) of the students reported that they attended the distance education lessons using Wi-Fi; 7684 (51.4%) mobile internet and 866 (5.8%) the quota provided by Council of Higher Education (COHE) or the university

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Summary

Introduction

On December 31st, 2019, China reported the discovery of a new type of coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) pneumonia-like infection to the World Health Organization (WHO) inWuhan, which caused serious illnesses and death (Yuan et al, 2020). By January 2020, Karadag et al Int J Educ Technol High Educ (2021) 18:57 the fact that the COVID-19 infection became a pandemic affecting more than 160 countries in a few weeks left the whole world to confront with a global problem. Many countries including Turkey decided to shut down K-12 schools and universities temporarily and continue educational activities through distance education. Academic staff and students tried to adapt to this mandatory decision in a short time (Huang et al, 2020a, b). In this process, universities with reliable infrastructure continued through distance education systems, completed the 2019–2020 Spring semester, and planned to complete 2020–2021 Fall and Spring semesters in this way

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