Armstrong-Mensah Elizabeth, Ramsey-White Kim, Yankey Barbara, Self-Brown Shannon
School of Public Health, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, United States.
Front Public Health. 2020 Sep 25;8:576227. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2020.576227. eCollection 2020.
On March 11, 2020, the World Health organization declared COVID-19 a global pandemic. Following the speed with which COVID-19 spread to all parts of the world, and to contain the spread of the disease, most governments around the world, including the US, authorized unprecedented social containment measures to stem the tide. These measures among others required social distancing and the temporary physical closure of educational institutions. The Georgia State University School of Public Health, like all other institutions of higher learning, had to create distance-learning opportunities to enable students to complete the 2019-2020 academic year. The unplanned, rapid, and uncertain duration of the approach presented challenges at all academic levels. Not much information on best practices was available to guide such abrupt transitions to college education. The purpose of the study was to collect data on how the transition to distance learning impacted undergraduate and graduate students taking courses in public health at GSU. The goal was to identify student academic challenges and the unforeseen benefits of distance learning, and to use that information to inform practices that can be implemented during crises that impact university education.
2020年3月11日,世界卫生组织宣布新型冠状病毒肺炎(COVID-19)为全球大流行病。鉴于COVID-19迅速蔓延至世界各地,为遏制该疾病的传播,包括美国在内的世界上大多数政府都批准了前所未有的社会防控措施以阻止疫情发展。这些措施包括社交距离要求以及教育机构的临时停课。佐治亚州立大学公共卫生学院与所有其他高等院校一样,不得不创造远程学习机会,以使学生能够完成2019-2020学年的学业。这种方式的意外性、快速性和持续时间的不确定性给各个学术层面都带来了挑战。关于最佳实践的信息非常有限,无法指导向大学教育的这种突然转变。该研究的目的是收集有关向远程学习过渡如何影响佐治亚州立大学公共卫生专业本科和研究生课程学生的数据。目标是识别学生的学业挑战以及远程学习的意外益处,并利用这些信息为在影响大学教育的危机期间可实施的实践提供参考。