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Somesh P. Roy; Amber Young-Brice; Jenna Lassila; Brandon Kyle Johnson – College Teaching, 2024
In Spring 2020, engineering faculty transitioned to emergency remote instruction due to COVID-19. This mixed-methods study was done to understand the correlation between self-regulated learning and how students experienced the emergency transition to remote learning. The participants were from an upper-level engineering course, with 33 students…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Engineering Education, College Faculty
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Vikki C. Terrile – College Teaching, 2025
Community college students are more likely than their peers in four-year colleges to experience homelessness or housing instability. At the same time, homelessness is a curricular topic, particularly in social science courses. Given the prevalence of homelessness and housing instability in the community college student population, likely worsened…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Community Colleges, Community College Students, Homeless People
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Wilson, Anne M.; Sarooghi, Hessam; Ryan, Travis J.; Mitchell, NaShara; Fernhaber, Stephanie A. – College Teaching, 2023
While higher education plays a critical role in society, little is known about the motivation of faculty members within such institutions. In this paper, we explore the faculty motivation to voluntarily cocreate an interdisciplinary course as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The results of our qualitative, phenomenological study highlight…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Motivation, Team Teaching, Curriculum Development
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Alison E. Kelly; Kelly Cuccolo – College Teaching, 2024
College students' learning experiences were significantly impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic and the move to emergency remote teaching during March 2020. With the present availability of vaccines, many colleges and universities are now transitioning back to in-person learning. Students will need pedagogical support during this transition, but…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Student Experience, Electronic Learning
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Ditta, Annie S.; Lussier, Catherine M.; Speer, Annika C. – College Teaching, 2023
The COVID-19 pandemic caused instructors to quickly pivot their teaching into the remote environment. Now, as we conclude over a year of remote instruction, faculty need to focus on developing excellence in online and hybridized education. Research has been dedicated to discovering best practices in online teaching, but much of that work was…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Educational Theories, Educational Change
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Donnelly, Julie; Miller, Ann; Krsmanovic, Masha; Saitta, Erin – College Teaching, 2022
The COVID-19 pandemic was a crisis that required immediate response from higher education STEM faculty and support units. We analyzed this response using Weick's stages of sensemaking: enactment, selection, retention. Sensemaking began with rapid response to the initial emergency as faculty and support units enacted immediate responses to…
Descriptors: Teacher Response, College Faculty, STEM Education, Social Sciences
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Nina B. Eduljee; Laurie Murphy; Meredith Emigh-Guy; Karen Croteau – College Teaching, 2024
This empirical study examined undergraduate college students' perceptions about HyFlex/hybrid courses during the COVID-19 pandemic. A total of 305 students (73 male, 234 female) completed an online survey that assessed technological strategies, instructional strategies, and perceptions about HyFlex classes. Students indicated that most of their…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Blended Learning, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Metzler, Michael; Esmat, Tiffany A.; Langdon, Jodi; Edwards, Ordene V.; Carruth, Laura; Crowther, Kathryn; Shrikhande, Milind; Bhattacharya, Sylvia; Strong-Green, Ashley; Gurvitch, Rachel; Kluge, Stacy; Smitherman, Marina; Spinks, M'Lyn – College Teaching, 2022
In the Spring term of 2020, nearly 90% of higher education institutions in the United States were forced to transition from primarily face-to-face (F2F) instruction to various modes of remote or online instruction in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. State-funded colleges and universities in Georgia were mandated to do the same in April of 2020,…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Emergency Programs, Electronic Learning, Distance Education
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Amy Fisk; Rebecca Mushtare – College Teaching, 2024
This qualitative, narrative study explores the experiences of college students with disabilities before and during the remote learning period. Three main themes emerged as critical influences on student perceptions of institutional access and inclusion: accommodations and accessibility; building relationships and community and course structure and…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, College Students, Students with Disabilities, Access to Education
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Spinks, M'Lyn; Metzler, Mike; Kluge, Stacy; Langdon, Jody; Gurvitch, Rachel; Smitherman, Marina; Esmat, Tiffany; Bhattacharya, Sylvia; Carruth, Laura; Crowther, Katy; Denton, Ren; Edwards, Ordene V.; Shrikhande, Milind; Strong-Green, Ashley – College Teaching, 2023
This qualitative study explores the impact of the emergency transition to remote education (ETRE) during the COVID-19 pandemic on instructors and students through the lens of self-determination theory (SDT). A modified thematic analysis of narratives from a cross-sectional survey revealed eight themes: Sense of loss/grief, Role conflict,…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Teacher Attitudes, Student Attitudes, COVID-19
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Berlin, Kathryn; Weavera, Kathleen Visovatti – College Teaching, 2022
This paper explores results of an online course revision to enhance student learning strategies and interactions. Data was collected from 125 of 167 students enrolled in an entry-level course at a large Midwestern university. Mid-term and end-of-semester surveys indicate that students found strategies such as mini-lectures, Quick Checks, and…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Online Courses, Student Attitudes, Social Media