The Adoption of Online Learning during the Pandemic: Issues, Challenges, and Future Directions
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7719/irj.v17i1.750Keywords:
Education, E-Learning process, student learning and satisfaction, non-experimental descriptive correlational, Mandaue City, PhilippinesAbstract
The Covid19 Pandemic has shifted the entire momentum of the traditional education processes into an environment where students experience difficulties in the E-Learning program. This study determines the challenges encountered in the duration of the E-learning and its' effect on students' perceived learning and satisfaction during the Pandemic. The investigation study formulated an aggregate of 313 respondents on a snowball inspecting strategy. Frequency and simple percentage, weighted mean, Chi-Square Test of Independence, and One-way ANOVA were used to treat and interpret the data. The findings revealed that the students encountered difficulties through course quality, peer interactions, learning diversification, user-friendliness, and course design. Additionally, it was revealed that how they perceived these difficulties affects their perceived learning and satisfaction in the E-learning process. It was found out also that a higher level of challenges would associate with dissatisfaction and lower student perception in education. The study concluded that E-learning is a platform that should be present in the teaching and learning modalities in all institutions regardless of the situation. Additionally, the course quality, peer interactions, learning diversification, user-friendliness of the process, and its course contribute to increasing the student's perceived satisfaction in E-learning. Generally, the impact of the Covid 19 pandemic provides a manifestation that to improve student perceived learning and satisfaction; there is a need to intensify the execution in the administration, teachers, and the learning management systems used in a Higher Education Institution.
References
Baber, H. (2020). Determinants of understudies’ apparent learning result and fulfillment in Web-based picking up during the Pandemic of Coronavirus. Journal of Education and e-Learning Research, 7(3), 285-292. Retrieved from https://bit.ly/36SdTct
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Copyright (c) 2021 Kingie G. Micabalo, Winnie Marie T. Poliquit, Estela V. Ibanez, Robert B. Pabillaran, Carla A. Malait, Jesszon B. Cano
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.