| Literature DB >> 33809661 |
Sabina Potra1,2, Adrian Pugna1,2, Mădălin-Dorin Pop2,3, Romeo Negrea4, Luisa Dungan5.
Abstract
First-year students undergo several transformations like the transition from high school to university schedules, teaching methods, and discipline specificities to social changes that come with meeting new colleagues or moving to other locations far from family and friends. The COVID-19 outbreak brought additional concerns and uncertainties once educational systems implemented distance learning schemes for public health management. Nevertheless, higher educational organizations preferred to implement hybrid approaches for student engagement motivation and high dropout rate avoidance. In Romania, such an educational system has been applied with caution. Since the pandemic needs to be understood as an opportunity for adaptation and education improvements, the purpose of the present paper is to uncover lessons learned and to develop a systematized model based on students' perception regarding face-to-face, online and hybrid systems. For this reason, a grounded theory approach has been preferred. Thus, 149 Romanian students enrolled in the first year in engineering specialities with ages between 18-26 years both male (50.3%) and female (49.7%) have answered the research questions in an online environment due to pandemic restrictions. Based on the online asynchronous student interviews, 220 codes and a further 13 categories have been developed. After a pertinent analysis of the relationships between categories and relevant literature sorting, a theoretical model for the Romanian higher educational current pandemic situation has been proposed. The main face-to-face and online education characteristics are outlined, the hybrid approach becoming a bridge between the two systems. Management implications are outlined together with further research directions.Entities:
Keywords: face-to-face education; grounded theory; hybrid system; online asynchronous interviews; online education; student motivation
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33809661 PMCID: PMC8001292 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18063058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Grounded Theory steps for theoretical modelling.
Student distribution.
| Layers | Faculty | Number of Respondents | Percentage (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Industrial Chemistry and Environmental Engineering | 27 | 18.1 |
|
| Mechanical Engineering | 46 | 30.8 |
|
| Management in Production and Transportation | 76 | 51.1 |
| Total | 149 | 100 | |
The 13 categories formed in the axial coding phase of the research.
| No. | Category Name | Main Codes Describing the Category |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Better understanding | Easy to remember, channelled concentration, 100% attention, attention due to respect, immediate feedback, open and free environment, courage to speak |
| 2 | Socialization | Better interaction, friendships, the importance of interaction, meeting colleagues psychically important, openness towards colleagues, profound interactions, a warm welcome, teamwork |
| 3 | University experiences | University reputation, discovering interesting faculty elements, university library at hand, student unity/guidance (student dormitory), student dorm room—life on your own |
| 4 | Better explanations | Trained teachers, clarifications, blackboard explanations, examples, more student feedback for teachers, higher teacher impact on students, the teacher observes non-verbal communication, pleasure to teach |
| 5 | Hurdles due to pandemic restrictions | Distance restrictions, restrictions to gather/discuss in a high number, higher cost but it is worth it, know colleagues even with masks |
| 6 | Practical activities | Laboratory understanding, focus on practical aspects, great to do yourself the experiments |
| 7 | Online benefits | Time savings, better presence, easy to connect, half course time, comfortable, online experience in high school helpful, online useful for documentation, Virtual Campus practical for grade/course/tasks visualization, online advantage—information at your fingertips |
| 8 | Information overload | Partial understanding, difficulty, no incentives, low motivation to learn, not efficient, online not helpful, low productivity, difficult to prepare for tasks/exams online, the online reason for dropout, large quantity of homework/tasks, long time to solve tasks/homework, information loss, online difficulty perceiving information details |
| 9 | Presence and concentration hurdles | False presence, stress due to power shortage risk/internet connection problems, low online presence due to lightness, tiring in front of a screen, vision destruction, home commodity not productive, concentration hurdle, easy to distract, concentration hurdle—family, friends, phone, not so seriously taken |
| 10 | Limited interaction | Difficulty to know colleagues/teachers, no student questions, difficult to speak/respond more than one student, students used to socialize online but not for deep relationships |
| 11 | Teacher-related hindrances | Teacher re-evaluation, teachers demotivated by student lack of attention, large information quantity in half time, high teacher demands and low offering, course structure not adapted/fitted to online teaching teachers do not upload courses on the Virtual Campus, teachers that do not open their camera—disengaged students |
| 12 | Improvement opportunities | The teacher demands adapted for online education, being autodidact (self-taught), time management, online listening habits need to change, responsible student, challenge to use more virtual platforms, summaries/conspectus for lessons to understand, Virtual Campus problems (connection errors, difficulty in accessing some courses), CV improvement proposition (background personalization, time limit removed/time loading changed, grades/presence visualization per student, the organization for mobile use) |
| 13 | Hybrid approach characteristics | Transition/adaptation towards online learning, if not face-to-face, hybrid preference, hybrid system helpful, itinerary problems, hybrid system- student life idea formation, better accommodation to faculty, hybrid optimization, face-to-face explanations about the online, hybrid system—a gradual transition, hybrid approach protects students, student’s wellbeing the priority, hybrid approach helpful to familiarize with town/university/facilities/colleagues/teachers |
Figure 2Relationships between retrieved categories.
The degree of centrality for the 15 nodes network.
| Node | Category | DC | DC’ | %DC’ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Face-to-face education | 8.000 | 0.571 | 57.1 |
| 2 | Better understanding | 3.000 | 0.214 | 21.4 |
| 3 | Socialization | 4.000 | 0.285 | 28.5 |
| 4 | University experience | 4.000 | 0.285 | 28.5 |
| 5 | Better explanations | 5.000 | 0.357 | 35.7 |
| 6 | Pandemic-related restrictions | 3.000 | 0.214 | 21.4 |
| 7 | Practical activities | 4.000 | 0.285 | 28.5 |
| 8 | Online education | 8.000 | 0.571 | 57.1 |
| 9 | Online benefits | 2.000 | 0.142 | 14.2 |
| 10 | Information overload | 2.000 | 0.142 | 14.2 |
| 11 | Presence and concentration hurdles | 3.000 | 0.214 | 21.4 |
| 12 | Limited interaction | 4.000 | 0.285 | 28.5 |
| 13 | Teacher-related hindrances | 4.000 | 0.285 | 28.5 |
| 14 | Improvement opportunities | 6.000 | 0.428 | 42.8 |
| 15 | Hybrid approach | 7.000 | 0.500 | 50.0 |
Figure 3A theoretical model for the Romanian higher education system in the COVID-19 pandemic situation based on student perception.
In-depth interview for determining student’s satisfaction level regarding the hybrid education system in Politehnica University Timisoara—Interview Guide.
| 1. | What have been your expectations regarding your faculty/university before starting classes? |
| 2. | Has it been beneficial for you to start the seminars and laboratories in a face-to-face system? If yes, in what way has it helped you? Would you repeat the experience in the current pandemic situation? |
| 3. | What was the impact of the online system after the first month of hybrid education? Has it helped you coming to the faculty to understand/accommodate with online courses? The transition towards online education has been easier in this way? |
| 4. | Please detail your interactions with colleagues and teachers in both systems: face-to-face and online. Are these social interactions important for you/your learning activity? |
| 5. | Have you opted for student dorm rooms? If yes, what was the influence of this ac-commodation on your interpersonal relationships’ development opportunities and your learning process? |
| 6. | Are teachers prepared to teach online? Have they adapted their discipline materi-als/content? In which of the two systems have they better explained the con-cepts/problems? |
| 7. | How interactive, appealing and practical is the Virtual Campus (specific online edu-cational platform for UPT)? What improvements would you suggest for its optimiza-tion? |
| 8. | Subjects are easier to retain/understand in face-to-face or online systems? Tasks/homework have been more/harder in the online or traditional system? |
| 9. | Is the structure of the courses appropriate for both systems (face-to-face and online)? Mention (if it is the case) what should be added, changed or adapted, in your opinion. |
| 10. | Do you learn better face-to-face or online? Have you changed recently the way in which you listen/learn? Can you concentrate in the online environment better or the same as in the traditional version? What are the challenges the online education brought in this sense? |
| 11. | Your presence has improved in the online environment? Is it easier/convenient this way? Do you save time compared to the traditional face-to-face presence? |
| 12. | The hybrid system is adequate for the current situation? Do you see it possible for the next year? Or do you prefer exclusive face-to-face or exclusive online education? |
| 13. | Age: |
| 14. | Gender: |
| 15. | Faculty: |
| 16. | Specialty: |