The Immediate Impact of COVID-19 on Postsecondary Teaching and Learning

Paul McDaniel, PhD
2 min readNov 6, 2020

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Photo by Ryan Jacobson on Unsplash

“Universities and colleges worldwide have quickly moved campus-based classes to virtual spaces due to the COVID-19 pandemic,” begins an open-access article our team published on October 28, 2020, in the American Association of Geographers’ peer-reviewed journal, Professional Geographer, entitled “The Immediate Impact of COVID-19 on Postsecondary Teaching and Learning.”

This article emerged from a panel discussion session at the virtual 2020 American Association of Geographers annual meeting in April 2020. The authorship team consisted of Terence Day (Okanagan College), I-Chun Catherine Chang (Macalester College), Calvin King Lam Chung (Chinese University of Hong Kong), William E. Doolittle (University of Texas), Jacqueline Housel (Sinclair Community College), and Paul N. McDaniel (Kennesaw State University).

As the abstract of our article continues, “This article explores the impact of this sudden transition of learning and teaching based on experiences and evidence from six institutions across three countries. Our findings suggest that although online and remote learning was a satisfactory experience for some students, various inequities were involved. Many students lacked appropriate devices for practical work and encountered difficulties in securing suitable housing and workspace. Students were stressed, and faculty were, too, especially those in precarious employment. The lack of fieldwork and access to laboratories created special challenges. We are concerned that the lack of hands-on experience could cause a decline in enrollments and the number of majors in geography over the next few years. This issue must be addressed by making introductory courses as engaging as possible. It is too early to determine the extent to which online and remote learning can replace campus-based, face-to-face geography education once the pandemic ends, but the new academic year of 2020–2021 will be revealing. Nevertheless, the COVID-19 crisis has revealed preexisting problems and inequalities that will need our collective effort to address, regardless of the pandemic’s trajectory.”

Continue reading the open access full-text article from the Professional Geographer here.

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Paul McDaniel, PhD
Paul McDaniel, PhD

Written by Paul McDaniel, PhD

Associate Professor of Geography in the Department of Geography and Anthropology at Kennesaw State University in metro Atlanta, Georgia.

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