University Students' Motivation and Engagement During the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Roles of Lockdown, Isolation, and Remote and Hybrid Learning.

IF 1.5 4区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Australian Journal of Education Pub Date : 2023-08-01 Epub Date: 2023-06-01 DOI:10.1177/00049441231179791
Andrew J Martin
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Abstract

This investigation comprised two studies that sought to identify the role of COVID-related disruptions in Australian university students' academic motivation and engagement. Study 1 involved a dataset of 500 university students and examined the links between COVID-19 pandemic disruptions (remote and hybrid learning modes, lockdown, isolation) and students' adaptive (e.g., planning and monitoring) and maladaptive (e.g., disengagement) dimensions of the Motivation and Engagement Scale (MES). Study 2 compared the mean motivation and engagement of Study 1 participants with mean levels from four published pre-COVID-19 Australian studies (N = 55, N = 233, N = 420, N = 941 university students) that also used the MES. Study 1 showed that lockdown and isolation (and not remote/hybrid learning) were associated with problematic motivation and engagement-with lockdown and isolation effects particularly noteworthy for maladaptive motivation and engagement. Study 2 showed that relative to the four pre-COVID-19 samples, the COVID-19 pandemic sample experienced difficulties with motivation and engagement, and again particularly so on maladaptive dimensions.

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COVID-19大流行期间大学生的动机和参与:封锁、隔离、远程和混合学习的作用
这项调查包括两项研究,旨在确定与冠状病毒相关的干扰在澳大利亚大学生的学术动机和参与中的作用。研究1涉及500名大学生的数据集,并检查了COVID-19大流行中断(远程和混合学习模式、封锁、隔离)与学生的适应(例如规划和监测)和适应不良(例如脱离)之间的联系动机和参与量表(MES)的维度。研究2将研究1参与者的平均动机和参与度与同样使用MES的四项已发表的澳大利亚新冠肺炎前研究(N = 55, N = 233, N = 420, N = 941名大学生)的平均水平进行了比较。研究1表明,封闭和孤立(而不是远程/混合学习)与动机和参与问题有关——对于不适应的动机和参与,封闭和孤立的影响尤其值得注意。研究2表明,与COVID-19前的四个样本相比,COVID-19大流行样本在动机和参与方面遇到了困难,尤其是在适应不良方面。
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来源期刊
Australian Journal of Education
Australian Journal of Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
21
期刊介绍: The Australian Journal of Education was established in 1957 under the editorship of Professor Bill Connell. Drawing upon research conducted in Australia and internationally, the AJE aims to inform educational researchers as well as educators, administrators and policymakers about issues of contemporary concern in education. The AJE seeks to publish research studies that contribute to educational knowledge and research methodologies, and that review findings of research studies. Its scope embraces all fields of education and training. In addition to publishing research studies about education it also publishes articles that address education in relation to other fields.
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