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Minsun Shin – European Journal of Teacher Education, 2024
The COVID-19 pandemic has affected people in every country in unprecedented, unimaginable ways. The abrupt transition to remote teaching due to the pandemic has posed several challenges to traditional teacher education programmes and altered student teaching experiences. This study aims to explore the student teaching experiences of pre-service…
Descriptors: Student Teaching, Teaching Experience, COVID-19, Pandemics
Tania Dumicic Pinto; Veronica Elizabeth Pardo; John Adamski; Nicole Barnes; Helenrose Fives – Journal of Research in Education, 2023
In this qualitative study, we used possible-selves theory to explore how teachers in the northeastern US made sense of their professional identity and possible selves during the forced school shutdowns that occurred because of the COVID-19 pandemic. We collected data through an initial questionnaire, weekly reflections, and semi-structured…
Descriptors: Professional Identity, Teacher Attitudes, COVID-19, Pandemics
Kathy Jackson – ProQuest LLC, 2022
School administrators face uncertainties and challenges in implementing nontraditional learning environments that provide high-quality educational experiences during pandemics and crises (Basilaia & Kvavadze, 2020; Tria, 2020). The purpose of the current qualitative exploratory case study was to explore how 11 district-level (superintendents…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Educational Change, Blended Learning, Superintendents
Guarracino, Danielle A. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2020
With the global pandemic this spring, we experienced a switch to remote education halfway through our semester at The College of New Jersey. For an advanced special topics in chemical biology class, lecture and group work required changes, increasing the number of assignments as well as the level of independent thinking and application-based…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Undergraduate Students, Biochemistry, Distance Education
Joseph Kenny Vermeille – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The problem addressed in this study was the challenging lived experiences, beliefs, and perceptions of K-12 public school teachers from the New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut tri-state areas who were precipitously forced to move from face-to-face to online during the COVID-19 pandemic despite their lack of skills and preparedness to perform in…
Descriptors: Teaching Experience, Electronic Learning, COVID-19, Pandemics
Baker, Courtney; Hjalmarson, Margret; Fennell, Francis – Investigations in Mathematics Learning, 2022
Mathematics specialists support the teaching and learning of K-12 mathematics and attend to school-based responsibilities and needs. This study examined the shifts in responsibilities of mathematics specialists during the COVID-19 pandemic to better-understand their current and potential future influence on mathematics teaching. An online survey…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Specialists, Teacher Leadership, Teacher Responsibility
Robin Tamarelli McKeon; Drew Gitomer – Theory Into Practice, 2024
This article examines how school boards in New Jersey navigated the COVID-19 pandemic, which also coincided with the national trauma and reactions related to the George Floyd murder and subsequent backlash. The politicization of issues during that first year of the pandemic foreshadowed profound changes in the world of many school boards in New…
Descriptors: Trust (Psychology), Boards of Education, Educational Policy, Equal Education
Thanawala, Anjali; Murphy, Charles; Hakim, Toufic – Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 2022
This paper examined how an HSI-STEM grant project at one such college responded, confronting challenges of the transition to an all-online environment head-on and tapping its unexpected benefits. With a focus on STEM student services and programs, two aspects of the situation are analyzed and studied. Facilitating Innovation: STEM administrators…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Learner Engagement, COVID-19, Pandemics
Anzelone, Caitlin Platania – MDRC, 2023
11 community colleges in New Jersey and two Historically Black Community Colleges (one in Alabama and one in Mississippi) joined the OnPath project, which had the goal to help community college students stay enrolled during the pandemic. OnPath facilitated a powerful combination of people and knowledge by bringing together college staff members…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Black Colleges, Academic Persistence, Dropout Prevention
Dominguez, Amanda M.; Feldman, Marina; Battey, Dan; Palpacuer Lee, Christelle; Hunsdon, Jessica – Mathematics Teacher: Learning and Teaching PK-12, 2022
During a typical family mathematics night (FMN), families are invited to a school, and parents and guardians work on mathematics activities with their children while teachers facilitate activities and share information on how to better support children in their mathematical development. How might this engagement change when information is not…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, COVID-19, Pandemics, Multilingualism
National Governors Association, 2021
One year after the COVID-19 pandemic forced state and school leaders across the nation and around the world to immediately close school buildings, the lasting impact on students is increasingly evident: Months of online learning and limited in-person interaction with educators, coaches and mentors have led to gaps in learning, and unknown…
Descriptors: Statewide Planning, State Policy, Acceleration (Education), School Closing
Nicole Luongo; Michael Finetti; Kimberly Case; Jay Garrels; Renee Evans – Journal on Empowering Teaching Excellence, 2023
This article presents information surrounding how the COVID-19 crisis can lead to opportunities for empowering growth in faculty course development and delivery. The authors show how higher education instructors have implemented remote teaching experiences they used during the pandemic to create engaging learning opportunities for students as they…
Descriptors: Teacher Empowerment, College Faculty, COVID-19, Pandemics
Hao, Winona – National Association of State Boards of Education, 2022
The pandemic hit the already vulnerable early childhood education (ECE) workforce especially hard, causing almost 40 percent of child care providers to shut their doors and many teachers to lose their jobs. In 2021, enrollment in state-funded preschool also dropped for the first time in 20 years--a nearly 20 percent decline that erased a decade of…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, COVID-19, Pandemics, Labor Force Development
Chan, Benny C.; Baker, Joseph L.; Bunagan, Michelle R.; Ekanger, Levi A.; Gazley, J. Lynn; Hunter, Rebecca A.; O'Connor, Abby R.; Triano, Rebecca M. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2020
The College of New Jersey's Chemistry Department and School of Science have been strategically transforming our teaching, learning, and mentoring environments for over a decade through programs that are targeted toward "new majority" students: low-income, first generation, and historically marginalized races and ethnicities. Recently, we…
Descriptors: College Science, Science Instruction, Chemistry, Instructional Innovation