2021
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18042127
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The Outbreak of the COVID-19 Pandemic and its Social Impact on Education: Were Engineering Teachers Ready to Teach Online?

Abstract: The major impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic are still affecting all social dimensions. Its specific impact on education is extensive and quite evident in the adaptation from Face-to-Face (F2F) teaching to online methodologies throughout the first wave of the pandemic and the strict rules on lockdown. As lesson formats changed radically, the relevance of evaluating student on-line learning processes in university degrees throughout this period became clear. For this purpose, the perceptions of engineering studen… Show more

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Cited by 43 publications
(56 citation statements)
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“…The difference between working experience could also imply that younger university teachers should receive further pedagogic training or make available models focused on ICTs inclusion to achieve sustainability in higher education. These results corroborate the findings of a great deal of the previous work that indicated how working experience, and possibility the of the workers' age [88], is a major factor in the ITCs skills [79], is also highly evaluated in this university teachers with an engineering background [65,89].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…The difference between working experience could also imply that younger university teachers should receive further pedagogic training or make available models focused on ICTs inclusion to achieve sustainability in higher education. These results corroborate the findings of a great deal of the previous work that indicated how working experience, and possibility the of the workers' age [88], is a major factor in the ITCs skills [79], is also highly evaluated in this university teachers with an engineering background [65,89].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Moreover, Spain is an example of relegating the educational policies to focus on health measures; this country presents much more disparity because of diversity between territories [64]. Meanwhile, Spanish researchers have highlighted how the use of ICTs has negatively impacted teachers' health and how the students considered that the university teachers were capable and could change from face-to-face to online education [65,66]. Although few studies and reports have focused on the university level [28,67,68], the implementation of online teaching was carried out in some scenarios without training, resources, or skills, implying longer hours of working [69].…”
Section: Education Icts and Covid-19mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Over time, several experiments were made using other pedagogical models, such as flipped classroom [19] or working in pairs [20], and using various digital media available such as portfolios, wikis, or digital tests [21]. Many studies reveal that some teachers appeared to be well prepared for a situation, so, if similar online teaching scenarios were ever repeated, the quality of teaching seems to be guaranteed [22]. A study establishes five priority attributes of online teaching to achieve quality: interaction between students, level of student concentration in online classes, improvement of the online test review system, and improved student satisfaction with online teaching and diversity of assessment tests [23].…”
Section: Background 21 Distance Learningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In some cases, circumstances allowed authors to implement questionnaires to make comparisons of student experiences before and after the shift to online learning. For example, Revilla-Cuesta et al (2021) acted quickly to create a questionnaire about the students' learning experience that they administered to students during the first week of online classes (to assess experiences of face-to face learning) and again at the end of the term (to assess online learning), and then compared results. Knudson (2020) had previously developed a concept inventory for student learning in his subject, biomechanics, which he deployed both at the start of online learning (to test learning from faceto-face instruction) and at the end (to compare online learning), coupled with an end-of-term questionnaire.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%