Sense of Competence and Feelings of Stress of Higher Education Faculty in the Transition to Remote Teaching: What Can We Learn from COVID-19 Pandemic in the Long Run

被引:1
|
作者
Raveh, Ira [1 ]
Morad, Sigal [2 ]
Shacham, Miri [1 ]
机构
[1] Braude Acad Coll Engn, Dept Teaching & Gen Studies, IL-2161002 Karmiel, Israel
[2] Beit Berl Coll, Teaching & Learning Ctr, IL-4490500 Beit Berl, Israel
关键词
remote teaching in higher education; COVID-19; pandemic; feelings of stress; remote teaching adoption; sense of competence;
D O I
10.3390/su15054027
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
This study focuses on measuring and characterizing the sense of competence and feelings of stress of higher education faculty in the transition to 'Emergency Remote Teaching' due to the COVID-19 pandemic and their willingness to adopt it in future. A total of 318 higher education faculty responded to a new questionnaire, developed and validated by the researchers. The findings show that the faculty experience a high sense of competence, related to positive feedback on remote teaching, a tighter trust relationship with the students, and their personal and professional development in the field of techno-pedagogy. Higher education faculty indicate feelings of stress on a medium-low level manifested by frustration and overburden due to difficulties in their interaction with the students, lack of reward, vague home-work boundaries, and techno-pedagogical challenges. The findings show that the more competent and the less stress higher education faculty feel regarding remote teaching, the more they wish to adopt it in future. The findings outline a desirable way to support higher education faculty and their professional development, aiming to reduce feelings of stress and enhance their sense of competence in remote teaching. Thus, they can implement changes, facing the challenges and expectations of higher education's "new normal" in which technology will play a key role.
引用
收藏
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The United States' reckoning with racism during the COVID-19 pandemic: What can we learn and do as allergist-immunologists?
    Wright, Lakiea S.
    Louisias, Margee
    Phipatanakul, Wanda
    JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY, 2021, 147 (02) : 504 - 506
  • [42] COVID-19 Pandemic and Eating Disorders: What Can We Learn About Psychopathology and Treatment? A Systematic Review
    Alessio Maria Monteleone
    Giammarco Cascino
    Eugenia Barone
    Marco Carfagno
    Palmiero Monteleone
    Current Psychiatry Reports, 2021, 23
  • [43] COVID-19 Pandemic and Eating Disorders: What Can We Learn About Psychopathology and Treatment? A Systematic Review
    Monteleone, Alessio Maria
    Cascino, Giammarco
    Barone, Eugenia
    Carfagno, Marco
    Monteleone, Palmiero
    CURRENT PSYCHIATRY REPORTS, 2021, 23 (12)
  • [44] COVID-19 patients with respiratory failure: what can we learn from aviation medicine?
    Ottestad, William
    Sovik, Signe
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA, 2020, 125 (03) : E280 - E281
  • [45] We are in this together: what the COVID-19 pandemic revealed about the nature of the student-professor relationship in higher education
    Dove, Lakindra Mitchell
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED RESEARCH IN HIGHER EDUCATION, 2025, 17 (01) : 483 - 494
  • [46] Occupational health responses to COVID-19: What lessons can we learn from SARS?
    Koh, David
    Goh, Hui Poh
    JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH, 2020, 62 (01)
  • [47] What can we learn from the experiences and expectations of patients on growing waiting lists for planned care in the COVID-19 pandemic?
    Kulkarni, K.
    Shah, R.
    Armaou, M.
    Leighton, P.
    Mangwani, J.
    Dias, J.
    BONE & JOINT OPEN, 2021, 2 (08): : 583 - 593
  • [48] What can we learn from COVID-19?: examining the resilience of primary care teams
    Hughes, Ashley M.
    Arredondo, Kelley
    Lester, Houston F.
    Oswald, Frederick L.
    Pham, Trang N. D.
    Jiang, Cheng
    Hysong, Sylvia J.
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 14
  • [49] What can we learn from the Baduanjin rehabilitation as COVID-19 treatment?: A narrative review
    Zhu, Zhenggang
    Pan, Xiaoyan
    Zhong, Faping
    Tian, Jun
    Ong, Marilyn Li Yin
    NURSING OPEN, 2023, 10 (05): : 2819 - 2830
  • [50] Building capacity for integrated knowledge translation: a description of what we can learn from trainees’ experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic
    Priscilla Medeiros
    Celia Laur
    Tram Nguyen
    Meghan Gilfoyle
    Aislinn Conway
    Emily Giroux
    Femke Hoekstra
    Jean Michelle Legasto
    Emily Ramage
    Brenda Tittlemier
    Brianne Wood
    Sandy Steinwender
    Health Research Policy and Systems, 20