Towards Effective Blended Learning Through the Eyes of Students: A Survey Study in Transition into Face-to-Face Education
Abstract
Many researchers consider that blended or hybrid learning implies a meaningful combination of online and face-to-face activities. Before the COVID19 pandemic, studies had shown promising results of blended learning to improve student performance. However, the design and implementation of effective combinations is far from trivial, considering students' differences regarding their demographics and self-regulatory capacities. This paper presents a survey study developed in an Engineering school of a Latin American university that transitioned from online learning to a hybrid format in mid-2021. Quantitative data was collected throughout an online questionnaire applied to a convenience sample of 1,124 students. Subgroup differences were identified by means of exploratory factor analysis and clustering. Two different subgroups emerged from the data: those who prefer online learning and those who prefer face-to-face activities. This difference is particularly observed in students from different cohorts and regions of origin: students who are closer to graduation preferred online activities, as well as students who come from regions outside the campus location. Students' preferences varied regarding feedback delivery and collaboration with peers, which are usually synchronous activities. Further implications are discussed to inform instructional design of blended and hybrid approaches beyond COVID-19.
Más información
Título según WOS: | Towards Effective Blended Learning Through the Eyes of Students: A Survey Study in Transition into Face-to-Face Education |
Título de la Revista: | STRING PROCESSING AND INFORMATION RETRIEVAL, SPIRE 2020 |
Volumen: | 13450 |
Editorial: | SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG |
Fecha de publicación: | 2022 |
Página de inicio: | 492 |
Página final: | 499 |
DOI: |
10.1007/978-3-031-16290-9_41 |
Notas: | ISI |