College Students Discuss an Important Location to Them During the Pandemic Through Building Websites

IF 1.9 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH International Journal of Instruction Pub Date : 2024-01-01 DOI:10.29333/iji.2024.17118a
Tara Hembrough
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Abstract

During the COVID-19 pandemic, many college students, including low-income and racial minorities, experienced stressors related to their physical and psychological health, relationships, finances, and academic status. Moreover, most students had possessed difficulty previously in writing about their personal and communal identities and needs; exploring place-related rhetorics; and engaging in digital composition practices, including creating a website. This article presents an exploratory case study, which applies a mixed-methods approach employing a convergent-parallel strategy, involving an assignment where students used digital composition practices to build a website about a place, such as their hometown or a local park, that was important to them during the pandemic. The study involved 65 low socioeconomic status (SES) students from a rural university with a Native American subpopulation. For the assignment, students explored their identity and background, as well as how they and their location of choice were impacted by the pandemic. As outcomes of formulating a website about two difficult topics for the students to raise, their identity and the pandemic’s impact upon themselves as part of the greater, epic crisis, students learned to think critically; examine their personal and cultural pandemic-related concerns; research information about their place of choice; make creative decisions about their website; draft, compose, and revise digital work; and reflect upon their project. In completing a website about an important location as the study’s aim, students became more willing to consider their background and the pandemic’s impact on them and to gauge the 24 potentially related stressors they experienced tied to their physical and mental health, familial and social relationships, financial outlook, and academic goals. The author delineates the website assignment’s objectives, and both students and faculty raters measured students’ writing outcomes upon completing their site. Keywords: place, environmental issues, identity, COVID-19 pandemic, stressors, websites, digital composition
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大学生通过建立网站讨论大流行病期间对他们很重要的一个地点
在 COVID-19 大流行期间,许多大学生,包括低收入人群和少数种族人群,都经历了与身心健康、人际关系、经济和学业状况相关的压力。此外,大多数学生以前在写作个人和社区身份与需求、探索与地方相关的修辞以及参与数字作文实践(包括创建网站)方面都遇到过困难。本文介绍了一项探索性案例研究,该研究运用了一种混合方法,采用了聚合-平行策略,其中涉及一项作业,即学生利用数字作文实践建立一个网站,介绍在大流行病期间对他们很重要的一个地方,如他们的家乡或当地的一个公园。这项研究涉及 65 名来自一所农村大学的社会经济地位较低(SES)的学生,他们都是美国原住民。在作业中,学生们探讨了他们的身份和背景,以及他们和他们选择的地点如何受到大流行病的影响。对学生来说,要提出两个困难的主题,即他们的身份和大流行病作为更大的史诗危机的一部分对他们自身的影响,作为制作网站的成果,学生们学会了批判性思考;审视他们个人和文化中与大流行病相关的问题;研究他们所选择的地方的信息;对他们的网站做出创造性的决定;起草、创作和修改数字作品;以及对他们的项目进行反思。在完成一个以重要地点为研究目标的网站时,学生们更愿意考虑他们的背景和大流行病对他们的影响,并评估他们所经历的与身心健康、家庭和社会关系、经济前景和学业目标相关的 24 种潜在压力。作者阐述了网站作业的目标,学生和教师评分人员都对学生完成网站后的写作成果进行了测量。关键词:地点、环境问题、身份认同、COVID-19 大流行病、压力源、网站、数字作文
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来源期刊
International Journal of Instruction
International Journal of Instruction EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
自引率
38.90%
发文量
244
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: nternational Journal of Instruction is an internationally recognized journal in the field of education and is published four times a year (in January, April, July & October). The aim of this journal is to publish high quality studies in the areas of instruction, learning, teaching, curriculum development, learning environments, teacher education, educational technology, educational developments. Studies may relate to any age level - from infants to adults. IJI, being an international journal, our editorial advisory board members are from various countries around the world. The articles sent to the Journal are always reviewed by two members of the Editorial Advisory Board (double blind peer review), and in some cases, if necessary, by another member of the Board. Depending on the evaluation reports of the members of the Editorial Advisory Board, articles are published or not. Article evaluation process takes approximately three months. The authors are responsible for the errors, if any, in their published articles. The articles need to be not published elsewhere previously.
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