Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Psychology, Vol 9(3), Sep 2023, 235-253; doi:10.1037/stl0000250
Following the announcement of the SARS-CoV-2 (Severe Accute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2; COVID-19) global pandemic, many undergraduate students made the unexpected transition from learning in-person to learning online. Here, we address concerns regarding the impact of pandemic-related changes on students’ learning-related experiences, specifically pertaining to affect, attention, and time perception. One-hundred and forty-six undergraduate students completed a survey shortly after their university transitioned from conducting course in-person to fully online. Questions assessed students’ perceptions of their changes in affect, attention, and time perception relative to the time before the announcement of SARS-CoV-2 prevention measures. Students reported significant increases in school-related anxiety and nonproductive attention-related behaviors (e.g., mindless tech use), while reporting significant decreases in motivation, productive attention-related behaviors (e.g., ability to focus), and their ability to keep track of time. We also examined relations between students’ pre-pandemic-intervention traits (i.e., in attention failures, self-control, and stress) and pandemic-related change responses, and found (among other correlations) that prepandemic reports of poorer attentional and self-control were correlated with perceived decreases in abilities to track time. Our findings have important implications for pedagogical practices in pandemic and postpandemic times. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved)