Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://hdl.handle.net/10259/5840
Título
Tabla 4. ANCOVA de un factor de efectos fijos (año de docencia primer año de la pandemia por la COVID 19 vs. segundo año), covariable (tipo de titulación) respecto de la satisfacción y de las respuestas de aprendizaje
Autor
Editorial
Universidad de Burgos
Fecha de publicación
2021
Cobertura temporal
start=2020; end=2021
DOI
10.36443/10259/5840
Resumo
Higher Education is the driving force behind the social and economic development of countries, the ultimate aim of which is to provide quality academic training. At present, teaching-learning models in virtual environments imply important challenges, specifically in the current situation of the COVID-19 health crisis. Some of these challenges will be addressed in this paper. In this study we worked with 224 third-year undergraduate students in Health Sciences degrees over two academic years during the pandemic situation. The objectives were 1) to check whether there were significant differences in student satisfaction with the teaching process in the first year of the pandemic (e-Learning teaching) vs. the second year (b-Learning teaching); 2) to check whether there were significant differences in academic results between the two groups. A quantitative research (a 2x2 factorial design and ANOVA and ANCOVA analyses were applied) and a qualitative research (a comparative design and categorisation analysis and co-occurrence analysis were applied) were carried out. The results indicate differences in some aspects of satisfaction and learning outcomes in favour of teaching in the second year. Students rated positively the use of active methodologies and technological resources, although they concluded that these required more work time.
Palabras clave
online learning
technology innovation
satisfaction
project based learning
flipped classroom
digital competence
Materia
Enseñanza superior
Education, Higher
Tecnología
Technology
Referenciado en
Documento(s) sujeto(s) a una licencia Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported