Abstract

Abstract This paper explores the teaching path of the civics class in colleges and universities during the mobile Internet era, and uses a questionnaire survey to analyze the reality of current mobile Internet-based civics class instruction. The changes in the teaching of civics and political science classes under the influence of mobile internet are tracked and systematically analyzed in terms of differences. This study focuses on both the general effective education classroom and the effective education classroom in the mobile environment. It utilizes the Nvivo software to investigate the teaching styles of teachers and the interactions between teachers and students in these two learning modes. The results show that nearly 20% of the students are in schools that have not yet conducted mobile Internet civics instruction, and about 24.5% do not have political theory classes on mobile Internet teaching. In the context of mobile Internet, the habit of reading on a cell phone is increasing by 10% annually, and learners are paying the highest attention to public news sources, reaching 86.4%, which creates favorable conditions for teaching mobile Internet civics and politics. An effective education classroom in the mobile environment tends to be open; the ratio of teachers’ words to students’s words is about 2.09%, and teachers are more willing to use media resources, and network means to check students’ knowledge. And the classroom status is at 0%, and the teaching process is more stable.

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