Open Access
MIXED CLASS TEACHING AS AN EMERGING TREND ACCELERATED BY COVID-19
Author(s) -
Jeļena Zaščerinska,
Anastasija Aļeksejeva,
Mihails Zaščerinskis,
Olga Gukovica,
Ludmila Aleksejeva,
Irina Abjalkiene
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
education. innovation. diversity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2661-5401
DOI - 10.17770/eid2021.2.6720
Subject(s) - class (philosophy) , mathematics education , pace , empirical research , covid-19 , computer science , multimethodology , higher education , teaching method , psychology , mathematics , medicine , artificial intelligence , political science , statistics , disease , geodesy , pathology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , law , geography
The COVID-19 pandemic has essentially accelerated the pace of the teaching transformation. Mixed (also hyflex) class teaching has become indispensable in medical, engineering, teacher and other fields of education when only online teaching is not enough to ensure the continuity of the instruction. The research aim is to identify scenarios of mixed class teaching underpinning the elaboration of implications for higher education. The present research used both - theoretical and empirical methods. The theoretical methods included the analysis of scientific literature, theoretical modelling, systematisation, synthesis, comparison, and generalisation. The empirical study carried out in June 2021 was exploratory. Data were collected through the analysis of published studies. The collected data were processed via content analysis. The present research allows concluding that teaching has undergone significant changes in different historical periods. The findings of the empirical study facilitate the conclusion on the existence of two scenarios of mixed class teaching, namely HOT (Here or There) and COIL (Collaborative Online International Learning). Both scenarios are oriented to students’ learning, teaching in these scenarios is neither segmented nor structured. The novel contribution of the research is revealed in the implications on mixed class teaching for higher education. Future research work was proposed.