| Literature DB >> 34202692 |
Carla Miguel1, Luísa Castro2,3,4, José Paulo Marques Dos Santos5,6, Carla Serrão7, Ivone Duarte2,3.
Abstract
COVID-19 has presented a novel pedagogical challenge in dealing with the sudden shift from classic instruction to emergency remote teaching (ERT). It had an impact on the well-being and mental health of lecturers, increasing burnout risk. A cross-sectional, quantitative, qualitative and analytical online study was conducted to collect participants' sociodemographic data, responses to ERT open-ended questions and mental health assessments using relevant instruments (CBI for burnout, Resilience Scale, DASS for depression, anxiety and stress, SWLS for satisfaction with life). High personal burnout levels were found in 41.2% of participants, high work-related burnout in 37.3% and high student-related burnout in 15.7%. Satisfaction with life, sleep routine changes and stress were determinants for personal burnout; stress and resilience for work-related burnout; satisfaction of life and sleep routine changes for students-related burnout. Opportunities for pedagogical innovation were pointed out as the main advantages to ERT, while the main negative impacts were on practical lessons and social interaction. Students and lecturers' safety and adequate institutional support might be insured, considering their expectations and needs, promoting mental health. Combining the advantages of online and traditional methods in a so-called "blended learning" approach, with close collaboration and communication between all those involved, appears to achieve better results.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; burnout; emergency remote teaching; lecturers; teaching
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34202692 PMCID: PMC8297013 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18136792
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Distribution of sociodemographic variables.
| Variables | |
|---|---|
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| Women | 35 (68.6) |
| Men | 16 (31.4) |
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| Single | 6 (11.8) |
| Married/Civil Union | 37 (72.5) |
| Divorced/Separated | 8 (15.7) |
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| No | 11 (21.6) |
| ≤12 years old | 19 (37.3) |
| >12 years old | 21 (41.2) |
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| Bachelor’s degree | 9 (17.6) |
| Master’s degree | 7 (13.7) |
| Doctoral degree | 34 (66.7) |
| Post-doctoral or aggregation | 1 (2.0) |
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| ≤5 years | 7 (13.7) |
| 6 to 15 years | 11 (21.6) |
| >15 years | 33 (64.7) |
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| Yes | 12 (23.5) |
| No | 39 (76.5) |
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| Active at workplace | 19 (37.3) |
| Active at telework | 28 (54.9) |
| Layoff | 2 (3.9) |
| Maternity/paternity license | 1 (2.0) |
| Other | 1 (2.0) |
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| Only at workplace and partial telework | 32 (72.5) |
| Only at telework | 14 (27.5) |
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| Yes | 11 (21.6) |
| No | 40 (78.4) |
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| Living alone | 6 (11.8) |
| Not living alone | 45 (88.2) |
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| Yes | 19 (37.3) |
| No | 32 (62.7) |
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| Yes | 6 (11.8) |
| No | 45 (88.2) |
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| Yes (Family Medicine) | 1 (2.0) |
| No | 50 (98.0) |
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| Yes | 15 (29.4) |
| No, and no interest in taking one | 28 (54.9) |
| No, but interested in taking one | 8 (15.7) |
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| <6 h | 6 (11.8) |
| 6 to 8 h | 43 (84.3) |
| >8 h | 2 (3.9) |
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| Yes (number of hours, bedtime and/or wake up time) | 26 (51.0) |
| No | 25 (49.0) |
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| Of older people | 4 (7.8) |
| Of dependent people | 3 (5.9) |
| Total | 7 (13.7) |
Burnout, resilience, stress, anxiety, and depression levels.
| Personal Burnout (CBI) | |
|---|---|
| High levels | 21 (41.2) |
| Not high levels | 30 (58.8) |
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| High levels | 19 (37.3) |
| Not high levels | 32 (62.7) |
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| High levels | 8 (15.7) |
| Not high levels | 43 (84.3) |
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| High | 19 (37.3) |
| Moderate | 25 (49.0) |
| Reduced | 7 (13.7) |
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| Normal | 40 (78.4) |
| Mild | 4 (7.8) |
| Moderate | 6 (11.8) |
| Severe | 0 (0.0) |
| Extremely severe | 1 (2.0) |
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| Normal | 43 (84.3) |
| Mild | 4 (7.8) |
| Moderate | 3 (5.9) |
| Severe | 0 (0.0) |
| Extremely severe | 1 (2.0) |
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| |
| Normal | 42 (82.4) |
| Mild | 4 (7.8) |
| Moderate | 3 (5.9) |
| Severe | 1 (2.0) |
| Extremely severe | 1 (2.0) |
Regression unstandardized coefficients (β) for CBI dimensions as outcomes and socio-demographic, professional and emotional variables as predictors in simple linear regression analysis models.
| Variable | Personal Burnout | Work-Related Burnout | Student-Related Burnout |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Men | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Women | 6.35 [−7.28; 20.0] | 2.03 [−9.51; 13.6] | −5.86 [−16.9; 5.14] |
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| ≤12 years old | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| No | −1.32 [−18.6; 15.97] | 0.12 [−14.4; 14.61] | −7.08 [−21.0; 6.82] |
| >12 years old | −6.47 [−20.9; 7.97] | −5.76 [−17.9; 6.36] | −6.46 [−18.1; 5.15] |
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| ≤5 years | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| 6 to 15 years |
|
| 9.20 [−8.63; 27.0] |
| >15 years | 10.2 [−6.98; 27.4] | 8.52 [−6.41; 23.5] | 5.66 [−9.68; 21.0] |
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| No | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Yes | −5.13 [−20.1; 9.84] | −0.847 [−13.5; 11.8] | −0.641 [−12.8; 11.5] |
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| Only at workplace and partial telework | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Only at telework |
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| No | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Yes | −5.64 [−21.1; 9.78] | −5.55 [−18.5; 7.39] |
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| Living alone | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Not living alone | −3.43 [−23.2; 16.3] | −2.98 [−19.6; 13.6] | −8.89 [−24.7; 6.94] |
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| <6 h | Reference |
| Reference |
| 6 to 8 h | −7.49 [−27.3; 12.3] |
| −1.87 [−17.9; 14.1] |
| >8 h | −22.22 [−59.2; 14.8] | −16.7 [−47.6; 14.24] | −18.06 [−48.0; 11.9] |
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| No | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Yes |
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Regression unstandardized coefficients (β) for CBI subscales as outcomes and socio-demographic, professional, and emotional variables as predictors from multiple linear regression models.
| Variable | Personal Burnout | Work-Related Burnout | Student-Related Burnout |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| −1.46 [−2.85; −0.06] | - | −2.38 [−3.49; −1.27] |
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| No | Reference | - | Reference |
| Yes | 12.69 [3.54; 21.84] | 10.81 [2.07; 19.55] | |
| Stress | 2.66 [1.34; 3.99] | 2.18 [1.20; 3.16] | - |
| Resilience | - | −0.39 [−0.61; −0.17] | - |
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| 0.555 | 0.545 | 0.314 |
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| 19.5 ( | 28.7 ( | 11.0 ( |
Advantages and disadvantages of ERT: results of qualitative analysis.
| Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|
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| time flexibility; | difficult to motivate students to participate; |
| opportunity for pedagogical innovation; | webcams off; |
| diverse studying materials; | practical classes |
| invite guest lecturers | |
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| time management; | extra work; |
| commute/travel savings; | adaptation to technology |
| convenience; | |
| comfort (home) | |
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| contributes to controlling the pandemic | poor interactions between lecturers-students |
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| improves autonomy; | |
| improves responsibility; | |
| convenience | |
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Worries, challenges and possible solutions for ERT: results of qualitative analysis.
| Worries | Challenges | Solutions |
|---|---|---|
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| poor practical classes; | re-invent practical classes (labs); | combine practical and theoretical classes; |
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| risk of mental illness | keep mentally healthy | improve class design; |
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| demotivation; | motivate students; | |
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| lack of human contact; |