By Jayne Geisel, Jessica Snow, Hannah Warkentin
2 million+
post-secondary students took online courses in 2020-21 due to COVID-19 (Schrumm, 2020).
92%
of Canadian post-secondary institutions transitioned courses online (blended or fully online) in 2020 (Bazinet et al., 2020).

Online teaching requires a different perspective compared to on-ground teaching...New faculty should be offered to reduce teaching loads to enable them to transition to the demands of online instruction...and all faculty should set boundaries for reasonable workloads.
(Tanis, 2020, p. 19).
How does quality online learning differ from ERT?
Online learning requires a detailed schedule including time estimates on asynchronous tasks (Tanis, 2020; Theodosiou & Corbin, 2020). Instructors engaged in ERT may not have time to create such schedules (Day et al., 2021; Shin & Hickey, 2021).
Learner to learner communication enhances outcomes in a quality online learning environments (Chickering & Ehrmann, 1996; Schultz & De Mers, 2020; Tanis, 2020; Theodosiou & Corbin, 2020). As ERT is an alternate way of delivering face-to-face content, there is a lack of emphasis on collaborative activities (Hodges et al., 2020; Shin & Hickey, 2021).
Timely responses and faculty participation in discussion boards promote engagement (Schultz & De Mers, 2020; Tanis, 2020). However, ERT’s focus is largely learner-content interaction (Schultz & De Mers, 2020).
Frequent, constructive, and positive feedback is key to online learning (Chickering & Ehermann, 1996; Tanis, 2020). Communication is difficult during ERT (Day et al., 2021; Hodges et al., 2020).
Students in quality online learning environments prefer interactive components, which include video, audio, and images over static/silent course material (Tanis, 2020). Many faculty resort to synchronous lecture in ERT (Damsa et al., 2021; Moorhouse & Konke, 2021; Schultz & De Mers, 2020).
Quality online learning means faculty are willing to adapt courses to meet students’ diverse learning needs (Tanis, 2020). The speed at which ERT is adopted means accessibility of learning materials might not be addressed (Hodges et al., 2020; Shin & Hickey, 2021).
Online learning is intentionally designed to support high performance using clear rubrics and expectations (Tanis, 2020). ERT’s focus is on safety, not necessarily learning (Hodges et al., 2020; Schultz & De Mers, 2020).
Teachers’ motivation can impact the quality of their teaching, mental health, and long-term commitment to teaching as well as students’ learning.
(Moorhouse & Kohnke, 2021, p. 280)
What supports do educators need to successfully transitionfrom ERT to quality online learning?
Multiple studies show that there are six key considerations in the transition to online learning: technological, pedagogical, psychological, institutional, socio-political, and content (Pischetola et al., 2021; Amhag et al., 2019; Tanis, 2020; Moorhouse & Kohnke, 2021; Fatimawati & Badiozaman, 2021; Schultz & de Mers, 2020).


What do instructors need to consider for quality online learning?

What do institutions need to consider for quality online learning?
References
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