Sustainability Challenges of Universities’ Online Learning Practices

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.46328/ijtes.558

Keywords:

Online learning, Flexible mode, Pedagogical shift, COVID-19 pandemic, Post-pandemic challenge

Abstract

This paper analyses university teachers and students’ experiences of online learning during the COVID-19 pandemic in Nepal and presents post-pandemic implications. Potential ramifications of the findings in a normal setting were suggested by the analysis of data gathered through semi-structured interviews with participants both during and after the pandemic, as well as through observation of online classes during the period. Findings demonstrate teachers' ability to create online learning, an alternative mode to a physical classroom, during the pandemic while having an inadequate level of ICT understanding. Despite limited access to digital technology and no administrative assistance, teachers and students created an online learning environment. Findings, however, show an increasing digital gap between rural and urban areas. The discontinuation of effective online learning techniques in the post-pandemic circumstances produced by the teachers during the pandemic pointed out the issues of reforming higher education in developing countries such as Nepal.

Author Biographies

Yam Nath Adhikari, Prithvi Narayan Campus, Pokhara Tribhuvan University

Yam Nath Adhikari is an M.Phil. scholar at Nepal Open University, Nepal. He has earned an M.Ed. from Tribhuvan University, Nepal. He has taught English literature at Prithvi Narayan Campus, Tribhuvan University for two years. His areas of research interest include teaching strategies used in EFL classrooms.

Karna Rana, Learning, Teaching and Library, Lincoln University, Lincoln, New Zealand

Karna Rana, a PhD graduate in education [E-learning] from the University of Canterbury, New Zealand), is an Online Learning Designer at Lincoln University, New Zealand. His areas of research interest are technology in education, online learning, digital technology and education, ICT and education policy, Indigenous knowledge, EFL/ESOL, EMI, rural development through education, educational management and leadership, and applied linguistics.

References

Adhikari, Y.N. & Rana, K. (2024). Sustainability challenges of universities’ online learning practices. International Journal of Technology in Education and Science (IJTES), 8(3), 430-446. https://doi.org/10.46328/ijtes.558

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Published

2024-08-06

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Articles