Comparative Analysis of Students' Views of Online Learning in the First and Second COVID-19 Semesters: Examples from Türkiye, Poland, Republic of North Macedonia, and Bosnia and Herzegovina

The abrupt change from face-to-face to Online Learning (OL) in the emergency COVID-19 semester surprised and forced students to alter their study habits. Then came the second online period, and students were expected to be happier and more successful since now they were familiar with OL. Was this th...

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Hauptverfasser: Hatipoglu, Çiler, Gajek, Elzbieta, Delibegovic Džanic, Nihada, Milosevska, Lina
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description The abrupt change from face-to-face to Online Learning (OL) in the emergency COVID-19 semester surprised and forced students to alter their study habits. Then came the second online period, and students were expected to be happier and more successful since now they were familiar with OL. Was this the case? Had the ways students learned, their perceptions of human interactions among teachers and students in OL, their opinions on the learning environment and their computer literacy changed? Our paper aims to answer those questions using comparative analyses of data sets from the first and second OL periods and attempts to uncover the positive and negative shifts and the topics that remained unchanged. The study's findings show that COVID-19 related educational changes had multidirectional influences on students' learning, ingroup interactions, and views about education and OL. Hopefully, the empirical data collected in this study will provide valuable information about OL's immediate and prolonged effects. [For the complete volume, "Intelligent CALL, Granular Systems and Learner Data: Short Papers from EUROCALL 2022 (30th, Reykjavik, Iceland, August 17-19, 2022)," see ED624779.]
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subjects Attitude Change
Barriers
College Students
Computer Literacy
COVID-19
Cultural Differences
Educational Change
Foreign Countries
Interaction
Mental Health
Online Courses
Pandemics
Peer Relationship
School Closing
Semester System
Student Adjustment
Student Attitudes
Study Habits
Teacher Student Relationship
title Comparative Analysis of Students' Views of Online Learning in the First and Second COVID-19 Semesters: Examples from Türkiye, Poland, Republic of North Macedonia, and Bosnia and Herzegovina
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