This afternoon, with colleagues from Swansea University and University of Bristol, we presented our joint paper at the UK and Ireland Computing Education Research Conference (UKICER 2020), disseminating results from our recent major international survey on “emergency remote teaching” and the impact of COVID-19 on the education sector. This paper focuses on the quantitative and qualitative findings from across the UK computer science education community, identifying a number of themes around “change as progressive” and “change as challenge” from the rapid shift to online learning, teaching and assessment.
The abstract of the paper is below; you can access the full paper online, or via my institutional repository:
The Impact of COVID-19 and “Emergency Remote Teaching” on the UK Computer Science Education Community
Tom Crick, Cathryn Knight, Richard Watermeyer and Janet Goodall
The COVID-19 pandemic has imposed “emergency remote teaching” across education globally, leading to the closure of institutions across a variety of settings, from early-years through to higher education. This paper looks specifically at the impact of these changes to those teaching the discipline of computer science in the UK. Drawing on the quantitative and qualitative findings from a large-scale survey of the educational workforce (N=2,197) conducted in the immediate aftermath of institutional closures in March 2020 and the shift to online delivery, we report how those teaching computer science in various UK settings (n=214) show significantly more positive attitudes towards the move to online learning, teaching and assessment than those working in other disciplines; these perceptions were consistent across schools, colleges and higher education institutions. However, whilst practitioners noted the opportunities of these changes for their respective sector – especially a renewed focus on the importance of digital skills — they raised a number of generalisable concerns on the impact of this shift to online on their roles, their institutions and their sectors as a whole; for example, the impact on workload, effective pedagogy and job fragility. More specifically for computer science practitioners, curricula and qualifications, there were concerns raised regarding the ability to meaningfully deliver certain core topics such as mathematical foundations and programming, as well as the impact on various types of formal examinations and assessment. Based on the data obtained from this rapid response survey, we offer informed commentary, evaluation and recommendations for emerging learning and teaching policy and practice in the UK computer science community as we move into the 2020-2021 academic year and beyond.
Keywords: COVID-19, emergency remote teaching, practitioner perceptions, pedagogy, assessment, curriculum, computer science education
https://doi.org/10.1145/3416465.3416472
(also see: Publications)
You can also download the slides from the UKICER2020 talk.