Teachers' Perceptions of the Shift from the Classroom to Online Teaching

In Thailand, social distancing due to the COVID-19 pandemic came into effect halfway through the university semester with teaching moving from the classroom to online. This was a completely new paradigm for most teachers. To understand the impact of the shift, a survey of all 52 English language tea...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Richard Watson Todd
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cranmore Publishing 2020-04-01
Series:International Journal of TESOL Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tesolunion.org/attachments/files/8ZWJICNGM09MZE36MJY04ZDK5FYTNL3OGY1AZJK57ZJJIBNJCZFY2ZLDZGY13ZWYX8YZVM7MDZHFMWFJCNTM2BMWQW7LJK13MTA38NTKW4LMI3.pdf
id doaj-400b61e090d946ae8559518a11e5f354
record_format Article
spelling doaj-400b61e090d946ae8559518a11e5f3542021-02-14T11:00:00ZengCranmore PublishingInternational Journal of TESOL Studies2632-67792633-68982020-04-0122416https://doi.org/10.46451/ijts.2020.09.02Teachers' Perceptions of the Shift from the Classroom to Online TeachingRichard Watson Todd0King Mongkut's University of Technology Thonburi, ThailandIn Thailand, social distancing due to the COVID-19 pandemic came into effect halfway through the university semester with teaching moving from the classroom to online. This was a completely new paradigm for most teachers. To understand the impact of the shift, a survey of all 52 English language teachers at one respected Thai university was conducted with two main focuses. First, teachers were asked to rate the seriousness of 17 potential problems at two time points, after the first week of online teaching and several weeks later. Second, teachers were asked to give comments about these problems and about the advantages and disadvantages of online teaching. Effect size differences between the two ratings were calculated. For the qualitative data, keyword analyses were used to identify patterns in the responses, and responses with similar content were grouped. The findings show that initially teachers rated many of the problems as serious, but that they quickly found solutions such as dividing lessons into a greater number of shorter units. However, problems remained with identifying suitable stimulating activities and marking student assignments. Teachers were ambivalent about the benefits of online teaching citing practical advantages but also highlighting difficulties in achieving some English language objectives and in gauging student reactions. Directions for dealing with the issues arising from these findings are given.https://www.tesolunion.org/attachments/files/8ZWJICNGM09MZE36MJY04ZDK5FYTNL3OGY1AZJK57ZJJIBNJCZFY2ZLDZGY13ZWYX8YZVM7MDZHFMWFJCNTM2BMWQW7LJK13MTA38NTKW4LMI3.pdfcovid-19 pandemiconline teachingteacher perceptionsseriousness of problems
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Richard Watson Todd
spellingShingle Richard Watson Todd
Teachers' Perceptions of the Shift from the Classroom to Online Teaching
International Journal of TESOL Studies
covid-19 pandemic
online teaching
teacher perceptions
seriousness of problems
author_facet Richard Watson Todd
author_sort Richard Watson Todd
title Teachers' Perceptions of the Shift from the Classroom to Online Teaching
title_short Teachers' Perceptions of the Shift from the Classroom to Online Teaching
title_full Teachers' Perceptions of the Shift from the Classroom to Online Teaching
title_fullStr Teachers' Perceptions of the Shift from the Classroom to Online Teaching
title_full_unstemmed Teachers' Perceptions of the Shift from the Classroom to Online Teaching
title_sort teachers' perceptions of the shift from the classroom to online teaching
publisher Cranmore Publishing
series International Journal of TESOL Studies
issn 2632-6779
2633-6898
publishDate 2020-04-01
description In Thailand, social distancing due to the COVID-19 pandemic came into effect halfway through the university semester with teaching moving from the classroom to online. This was a completely new paradigm for most teachers. To understand the impact of the shift, a survey of all 52 English language teachers at one respected Thai university was conducted with two main focuses. First, teachers were asked to rate the seriousness of 17 potential problems at two time points, after the first week of online teaching and several weeks later. Second, teachers were asked to give comments about these problems and about the advantages and disadvantages of online teaching. Effect size differences between the two ratings were calculated. For the qualitative data, keyword analyses were used to identify patterns in the responses, and responses with similar content were grouped. The findings show that initially teachers rated many of the problems as serious, but that they quickly found solutions such as dividing lessons into a greater number of shorter units. However, problems remained with identifying suitable stimulating activities and marking student assignments. Teachers were ambivalent about the benefits of online teaching citing practical advantages but also highlighting difficulties in achieving some English language objectives and in gauging student reactions. Directions for dealing with the issues arising from these findings are given.
topic covid-19 pandemic
online teaching
teacher perceptions
seriousness of problems
url https://www.tesolunion.org/attachments/files/8ZWJICNGM09MZE36MJY04ZDK5FYTNL3OGY1AZJK57ZJJIBNJCZFY2ZLDZGY13ZWYX8YZVM7MDZHFMWFJCNTM2BMWQW7LJK13MTA38NTKW4LMI3.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT richardwatsontodd teachersperceptionsoftheshiftfromtheclassroomtoonlineteaching
_version_ 1724271089210621952