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Abstract Title: A Student-Centered Understanding of the Impacts of Environmental Inequities on Teaching and Learning during Remote Instruction
Abstract: During the crises of spring 2020 - the global pandemic caused by COVID-19, the associated economic crisis, and civil uprising due to racialized violence against Black people - many students continued their education despite numerous challenges. Work went into understanding the limitations of remote instruction to better ensure students' success; and instructors adapted instruction and transformed courses to mitigate the impact of these challenges on student engagement and performance. Much of this work centered access inequities.  Access inequity occurs when individual students are not able to engage with remote instruction due to conditions that prevent them from receiving instruction, such as lack of material resources, such as adequate computers and access to reliable internet connection, that are essential to remote instruction or poorly accessible educational materials for students with disabilities.  However, environmental inequity, situations where a student may be able to access remote instruction materials but circumstances prevent the student from engaging in the ways that other students can-is less well documented.  In these situations, students have access but may not be able to devote attention, engage in discussions, turn on video conferencing, or interact as other students might. In this work, we focus on environmental inequity. Additionally, the voices of students as learners and also members of the educational community were neglected in many efforts to transform education to meet the challenging circumstances of the pandemic. For example, Author 3 indicated that faculty were not listening to students and were in many ways exacerbating the challenges that students were facing during the hardships of the global pandemic.  That proclamation was the motivation for this study, which examines the experiences of Learning Assistants as students and instructional peer support, with respect to teaching and learning during a year of overlapping crises.
Abstract Type: Contributed Poster Presentation
Session Time: Poster Session 1 Room D
Poster Number: 1D-2

Author/Organizer Information

Primary Contact: Pablo J Cueva Vera
Rutgers University School of Engineering
Elizabeth, NJ 07206
Phone: 9089436009
Co-Author(s)
and Co-Presenter(s)
Gafar Tajudeen (Rutgers University-New Brunswick)
Nazeer Mosley  (Rutgers University-New Brunswick)
Nkenna Opara  (Rutgers University-New Brunswick)
Geraldine L. Cochran  (Rutgers University-New Brunswick)
Corey Ptak  (Rutgers University-New Brunswick)