Exploring predictors of instructional resilience during emergency remote teaching in higher education

Abstract In 2020, Higher Education institutions were pressed to swiftly implement online-based teaching. Among many challenges associated with this, lecturers in Higher Education needed to promptly and flexibly adapt their teaching to these circumstances. This investigation adopts a resilience frami...

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Main Authors: Joshua Weidlich, Marco Kalz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-08-01
Series:International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s41239-021-00278-7
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spelling doaj-2cc0dfa100494b49bf94ca5a69d4cbfe2021-08-15T11:14:12ZengSpringerOpenInternational Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education2365-94402021-08-0118112610.1186/s41239-021-00278-7Exploring predictors of instructional resilience during emergency remote teaching in higher educationJoshua Weidlich0Marco Kalz1Department of Technology-enhanced Learning, Heidelberg University of EducationDepartment of Technology-enhanced Learning, Heidelberg University of EducationAbstract In 2020, Higher Education institutions were pressed to swiftly implement online-based teaching. Among many challenges associated with this, lecturers in Higher Education needed to promptly and flexibly adapt their teaching to these circumstances. This investigation adopts a resilience framing in order to shed light on which specific challenges were associated with this sudden switch and what helped an international sample of Higher Education lecturers (N = 102) in coping with these challenges. Results suggest that Emergency Remote Teaching was indeed challenging and quality of teaching was impeded but these effects are more nuanced than expected. Lecturers displayed instructional resilience by maintaining teaching quality despite difficulties of Emergency Remote Teaching and our exploration of predictors shows that personality factors as well as prior experience may have supported them in this. Our findings may contribute to the emerging literature surrounding Emergency Remote Teaching and contributes a unique resilience perspective to the experiences of Higher Education lecturers.https://doi.org/10.1186/s41239-021-00278-7Emergency Remote TeachingResilienceHigher educationCovid-19Teaching quality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joshua Weidlich
Marco Kalz
spellingShingle Joshua Weidlich
Marco Kalz
Exploring predictors of instructional resilience during emergency remote teaching in higher education
International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education
Emergency Remote Teaching
Resilience
Higher education
Covid-19
Teaching quality
author_facet Joshua Weidlich
Marco Kalz
author_sort Joshua Weidlich
title Exploring predictors of instructional resilience during emergency remote teaching in higher education
title_short Exploring predictors of instructional resilience during emergency remote teaching in higher education
title_full Exploring predictors of instructional resilience during emergency remote teaching in higher education
title_fullStr Exploring predictors of instructional resilience during emergency remote teaching in higher education
title_full_unstemmed Exploring predictors of instructional resilience during emergency remote teaching in higher education
title_sort exploring predictors of instructional resilience during emergency remote teaching in higher education
publisher SpringerOpen
series International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education
issn 2365-9440
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Abstract In 2020, Higher Education institutions were pressed to swiftly implement online-based teaching. Among many challenges associated with this, lecturers in Higher Education needed to promptly and flexibly adapt their teaching to these circumstances. This investigation adopts a resilience framing in order to shed light on which specific challenges were associated with this sudden switch and what helped an international sample of Higher Education lecturers (N = 102) in coping with these challenges. Results suggest that Emergency Remote Teaching was indeed challenging and quality of teaching was impeded but these effects are more nuanced than expected. Lecturers displayed instructional resilience by maintaining teaching quality despite difficulties of Emergency Remote Teaching and our exploration of predictors shows that personality factors as well as prior experience may have supported them in this. Our findings may contribute to the emerging literature surrounding Emergency Remote Teaching and contributes a unique resilience perspective to the experiences of Higher Education lecturers.
topic Emergency Remote Teaching
Resilience
Higher education
Covid-19
Teaching quality
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s41239-021-00278-7
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AT marcokalz exploringpredictorsofinstructionalresilienceduringemergencyremoteteachinginhighereducation
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