Article Notice – Remote Teaching during COVID-19 Emergency: Teaching and Assessment Strategies and the Role of Previous Training

Article Notice – Remote Teaching during COVID-19 Emergency: Teaching and Assessment Strategies and the Role of Previous Training

Source Node: 1984357

February 28, 2023

Article Notice – Remote Teaching during COVID-19 Emergency: Teaching and Assessment Strategies and the Role of Previous Training

Filed under: virtual school — Michael K. Barbour @ 12:09 pm
Tags: articles, cyber school, education, high school, open scholarship, research, virtual school

The first of two articles that scrolled across my electronic desk over the past few days.

  • September 2022
  • Education Sciences 12(646):1-17
  • DOI: 10.3390/educsci12100646
  • License CC BY 4.0
  • Davide Capperucci
  • Irene Dora Maria Scierri
  • Ilaria Salvadori
  • Federico Batini
  • Giulia Toti
  • Giulia Barbisoni
  • Eleonora Pera

Abstract – The Emergency Remote Teaching experience during the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in schools reviewing teaching methods and strategies. The Italian Society for Educational Research (SIRD) conducted a survey in which more than 16,000 Italian teachers took part. The aim of this study is to be a first step in analysing the data from the Tuscany and Umbria regions by comparing them with national data in relation to the teaching and assessment methods and strategies used, and with the previous teacher training in distance learning. Secondly, the paper aims to deepen the link between the use of certain teaching and assessment methods, the previous training, and the quality of the distance learning experience perceived by teachers. For this purpose, some items and scales from the questionnaire used in the SIRD survey and some categories from the qualitative analysis of the responses to the open-ended questions were selected. The study, first and foremost, revealed some peculiarities of the two regions, including Tuscany’s lower evaluation of the effectiveness of the experience. On the national level, a positive relationship was found between teachers using interactive teaching strategies and “alternative” assessment activities and the higher perception of both effectiveness for student learning and adequate performance assessment. Finally, the role of previous training is underlined as useful only if it is not generally technology-centred, but rather related to teaching and assessment methods in virtual learning environments.

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