Coronateaching in a Palestinian University: Changes, Challenges, and New Conceptions
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.211224.003Keywords:
corona teaching; emergency remote teaching; e-learning; online learningAbstract
This longitudinal qualitative case study comprised an investigation of the experiences, perceptions, and beliefs of five ELT teachers at a Palestinian University where government-mandated COVID-19 emergency closure forced an institution-wide implementation of emergency remote teaching. It is among the few research projects to date that encompass the entire first year of work in pandemic emergency conditions as viewed from the perspective of instructors working in a higher education ELT program. The research was framed within an interpretative, constructivist paradigm, with data collected by means of semi-structured interviews and interrogated via thematic analysis. Topics of interest included the challenges, benefits, drawbacks, and general processes associated with e-learning as experienced by teachers involved in the rapid deployment of online education at an institution with no history of offering such courses. The results indicate that teachers faced significant pedagogy shock along with an immediate need to reconsider and reconfigure their roles within the teaching space and teacher-student relationship. Findings highlight the need for dedicated institutional e-learning support infrastructures, both hard and soft, comprehensive technical training and general digital literacy development for teachers and students, specialized teacher education in digitally-mediated pedagogies, and effective awareness-raising campaigns directed at students’ families and other community stakeholders.
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Copyright (c) 2021 Hidayat Abu Elhawa
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