| Literature DB >> 33935578 |
Zuheir N Khlaif1, Soheil Salha1, Bochra Kouraichi2.
Abstract
Student engagement in online learning enhance students performance and the outcomes of the learning process in online learning environment. The existed literature revealed various factors influencing student engagement in online leaning, however these studies were before the COVID-19 crisis. The purpose of the current paper is to explore the factors that influence student engagement in online learning during the COVID-19 crisis in middle school settings in developing countries where is a lack of studies about the factors influencing student's engagement in emergency remote learning during the crisis. A qualitative approach was used for data collection and analysis. Semi-structured interviews with 34 participants (14 students, 13 teachers, and 7 parents) were conducted for 20-30 min. Furthermore, online class observations were used for data collection; 13 online classes were observed. Each class was 40 min. A thematic analysis was used to categorize the findings into themes and subthemes. The findings of the study revealed that various factors influence student engagement in online learning during the crisis including infrastructure factors, cultural factors, digital inequality, and the threat to digital privacy. Cultural factors were the important factor that influences females because of parents' culture and their bias against females using online learning compared to male students. Teachers' presence and quality of content were the major factors that influence student engagement, where parental concerns, norms, and traditions emerged as the major factors in the crisis, influencing engagement. Most of the participants reported that teaching and learning online during the crisis has broadened the digital inequality and threatened their digital privacy which influenced negatively student engagement. The limitations of this research included the limited number of participants covering a large geographic area, and the research design using diverse and often limited educational software and delivery methods. Future studies could utilize a mixed-method approach and include more participants. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10639-021-10566-4.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Emergency remote teaching; ICT-based teaching; Online learning; Remote learning
Year: 2021 PMID: 33935578 PMCID: PMC8077864 DOI: 10.1007/s10639-021-10566-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Educ Inf Technol (Dordr) ISSN: 1360-2357
Fig. 1The relationships between the themes and subthemes with student engagement as reported by the participants
Gender and number of the participants from each school
| School | School Type | Teachers | Students | Parents | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | Female | Male | Female | Male | Female | ||
| School 1 | Boys | 3 | 0 | 5 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
| School 2 | Mixed school | 2 | 3 | 3 | 4 | 0 | 3 |
| School 3 | Girls | 0 | 5 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
| Total | 5 | 8 | 8 | 6 | 2 | 5 | |
Example of the Inductive Thematic Analysis
| Text segments | Main Idea | Theme | Subthemes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parent F 3: Our experience with online learning is bad because we have six children in schools with one laptop and two smartphones. It was difficult for children to attend all online classes. It was difficult to buy additional devices… All day, Internet is unreliable | Lack of devices to sue by all children at the same time Unreliable Internet | Social factor Infrastructure factors | Availability of devices Availability of Internet |
| Teachers M 2: Yes, I agree, the content and activities were not attractive. this is not my normal work. I do not have enough time to design effective content | Content not attractive for students Attractive content needs more time to design | Infrastructure factors | Quality of content |
| Student F 4: I cannot attend the classes in night because in my family does not allow us to use Internet in night | Using Internet is not allowed in night | Cultural factors | Norms and traditions |
Final themes and subthemes that emerged in the study with examples
| Theme | Subtheme | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Infrastructure Factors | Availability of devices | Lack of tablet, laptop, desktop |
| Technical support | Access to the online materials, upload files | |
| Availability of Internet | Weaknesses of Internet signal | |
| Quality of the digital content | Using various modules and activities to engage students | |
| Teacher's Presence | Provide timely feedback, virtual office hours | |
| Cultural Factors | Parental Concerns | Unsafe environment, communicating with strange people |
| Norms and Traditions | Not using a Webcam, not using Internet at Night | |
| Digital Privacy | Sharing personal information, using other's devices and information | |
| Digital Inequality | Educational level, teaching topics |
Summary of the dimensions of the digital inequality due to EML during COVID-19
| Digital inequality in | Example |
|---|---|
| Infrastructure | "I missed four classes because at the class time there was no electricity. How will I be able to attend and engage in online learning?" (Student M 3) |
| Meaningful, high-quality, culturally appropriate content | "Designing and sharing high quality was difficult because it was an unplanned and sudden move to ERL" (Teachers M 5) |
| Lack of computer-friendly teacher | "I am not prepared to use technology in online learning for the whole class and for a long time" (Teacher F 4) |
| Parents' inability to follow their children in the new model of education | "I have five kids, each one has at least five assignments per week, it is difficult to follow them and I am not qualified to use new technology' (Parent F 5) |
| Educational levels | Online classes focused on middle schools |
| Students with disability | Teachers did not design suitable content for these important students in the community |
| Focusing on specific branches of middle school | Teachers reported they focused on scientific stream and ignoring grades 1–4 |
| submitting “articles” topics | focusing on scientific subjects and sometimes on languages |
| Internet broadband Connectivity | "It is difficult to upload the file of the assignment because of the limited Internet connection" (Various students males and females) |
Fig. 2The relationships between the themes and subthemes with student engagement as reported by the participants