Lecturer Autoethnographies of Adjusting to Online Student Interactions during COVID-19

In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic pushed South African historically disadvantaged institutions, that had not yet reached advanced levels of technology use in teaching and learning, to find immediate solutions to salvage the disrupted academic year. Interactions with students, which had predominantly be...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sandra Makwembere, Obert Matarirano, Nobert Rangarirai Jere
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: OpenED Network 2021-09-01
Series:Research in Social Sciences and Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ressat.org/index.php/ressat/article/view/565
_version_ 1797917076409548800
author Sandra Makwembere
Obert Matarirano
Nobert Rangarirai Jere
author_facet Sandra Makwembere
Obert Matarirano
Nobert Rangarirai Jere
author_sort Sandra Makwembere
collection DOAJ
description In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic pushed South African historically disadvantaged institutions, that had not yet reached advanced levels of technology use in teaching and learning, to find immediate solutions to salvage the disrupted academic year. Interactions with students, which had predominantly been face-to-face, shifted to various online platforms for lecturers to adopt emergency remote teaching approaches. Most of the lecturers were unprepared or incapacitated to make the shift to online environment. Studies have looked at the online teaching and learning experiences of students and lecturers during the COVID-19 pandemic but very few have taken an autoethographic approach to their inquiry and situated experiences in historically disadvantaged institutions. In this article, as lecturers, we use autoethnographies to provide an account of adjusting to interacting with students online during national lockdowns at a historically disadvantaged institution. The Social Cognitive Theory (SCT) was applied to guide the study. This reflexive approach is valuable, as it captures professional encounters and reflections needed to understand the effects of rapid changes to teaching and learning in response to the pandemic. Given the education disparities that already existed between South African higher education institutions before COVID-19, the article contributes to the discourse on how historically disadvantaged institutions can advance higher standards of teaching and learning to serve students better. Our reflections point to the personal, technical and structural challenges of maintaining regular online interaction. Our findings show that different approaches and techniques were applied to adjust to virtual teaching and learning. As teaching and learning methodologies have the potential to ingrain social inequalities, we made recommendations on how to improve online interactions with students from historically disadvantaged contexts.
first_indexed 2024-04-10T13:07:26Z
format Article
id doaj.art-aeb10b983fea453cab92bf690f8caf21
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2468-6891
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-10T13:07:26Z
publishDate 2021-09-01
publisher OpenED Network
record_format Article
series Research in Social Sciences and Technology
spelling doaj.art-aeb10b983fea453cab92bf690f8caf212023-02-15T16:12:52ZengOpenED NetworkResearch in Social Sciences and Technology2468-68912021-09-016210.46303/ressat.2021.16Lecturer Autoethnographies of Adjusting to Online Student Interactions during COVID-19Sandra Makwembere0Obert Matarirano1Nobert Rangarirai Jere2Walter Sisulu UniversityWalter Sisulu UniversityWalter Sisulu UniversityIn 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic pushed South African historically disadvantaged institutions, that had not yet reached advanced levels of technology use in teaching and learning, to find immediate solutions to salvage the disrupted academic year. Interactions with students, which had predominantly been face-to-face, shifted to various online platforms for lecturers to adopt emergency remote teaching approaches. Most of the lecturers were unprepared or incapacitated to make the shift to online environment. Studies have looked at the online teaching and learning experiences of students and lecturers during the COVID-19 pandemic but very few have taken an autoethographic approach to their inquiry and situated experiences in historically disadvantaged institutions. In this article, as lecturers, we use autoethnographies to provide an account of adjusting to interacting with students online during national lockdowns at a historically disadvantaged institution. The Social Cognitive Theory (SCT) was applied to guide the study. This reflexive approach is valuable, as it captures professional encounters and reflections needed to understand the effects of rapid changes to teaching and learning in response to the pandemic. Given the education disparities that already existed between South African higher education institutions before COVID-19, the article contributes to the discourse on how historically disadvantaged institutions can advance higher standards of teaching and learning to serve students better. Our reflections point to the personal, technical and structural challenges of maintaining regular online interaction. Our findings show that different approaches and techniques were applied to adjust to virtual teaching and learning. As teaching and learning methodologies have the potential to ingrain social inequalities, we made recommendations on how to improve online interactions with students from historically disadvantaged contexts.https://ressat.org/index.php/ressat/article/view/565autoethnographyCOVID-19emergency remote teachinghigher educationhistorically disadvantaged institutions
spellingShingle Sandra Makwembere
Obert Matarirano
Nobert Rangarirai Jere
Lecturer Autoethnographies of Adjusting to Online Student Interactions during COVID-19
Research in Social Sciences and Technology
autoethnography
COVID-19
emergency remote teaching
higher education
historically disadvantaged institutions
title Lecturer Autoethnographies of Adjusting to Online Student Interactions during COVID-19
title_full Lecturer Autoethnographies of Adjusting to Online Student Interactions during COVID-19
title_fullStr Lecturer Autoethnographies of Adjusting to Online Student Interactions during COVID-19
title_full_unstemmed Lecturer Autoethnographies of Adjusting to Online Student Interactions during COVID-19
title_short Lecturer Autoethnographies of Adjusting to Online Student Interactions during COVID-19
title_sort lecturer autoethnographies of adjusting to online student interactions during covid 19
topic autoethnography
COVID-19
emergency remote teaching
higher education
historically disadvantaged institutions
url https://ressat.org/index.php/ressat/article/view/565
work_keys_str_mv AT sandramakwembere lecturerautoethnographiesofadjustingtoonlinestudentinteractionsduringcovid19
AT obertmatarirano lecturerautoethnographiesofadjustingtoonlinestudentinteractionsduringcovid19
AT nobertrangariraijere lecturerautoethnographiesofadjustingtoonlinestudentinteractionsduringcovid19