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Survery: College Students Experienced Rocky Transition To Online Learning

By Tom Stanton Jul 16, 2021 | 9:00 AM

A new online survey shows more than two-thirds of college students report they learned less because of higher education’s shift to online learning during the pandemic.

Bernard McCoy, professor of journalism at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, conducted the spring 2021 survey of 500 college students who attended 30 institutions in 22 states. McCoy’s research is published in the July edition of the Journal of Media Education.

Students cited home distractions, social isolation and harder communication with other students as challenges that hindered learning during the pandemic. Four out of five respondents said they found online and remote learning more distracting than classroom learning.

Most U.S. colleges abruptly switched to online and remote learning in March 2020, when the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a global pandemic. Before the declaration, less than 3% of the students surveyed said they had taken online classes at least 91% of the time.

Six months after the declaration, more than two-thirds of the surveyed students were taking online classes at least 91% of the time, while 90% reported taking at least half of their classes online.  “This was a tsunami that no one saw coming,” said McCoy, who added technology and equipment to improve his remote instruction. “Suddenly, it was looming in front of us and washing over us. And so we had to learn how to swim.”

Yet, broken out by time periods, the survey may indicate students’ growing comfort level and faculty’s greater expertise with remote learning techniques as the pandemic wore on.   As vaccinations became available in spring 2021, many colleges began planning for a return to full classroom learning in fall 2021.

At the time of the survey in late winter and spring 2021, students were divided whether they wanted to return to full-time classroom learning when the pandemic ends. Slightly less than half said they wanted to return to classroom-only instruction. Slightly more than half said they’d like to continue with at least one remote learning option, whether it be asynchronous online classes that let them choose when they work on assignments; synchronous online classes that meet at set times but allow students to attend remotely; or a hybrid of the two.

The main reason they liked remote learning? Nearly half the students said they liked being able to schedule classes around full- or part-time jobs, and 45% said online studies saved them time and money. Nearly 40% cited anxiety about COVID-19.    McCoy said those results may signify a permanent change in the way higher education is delivered.