A research on distance education and alienation in academic staff during the Covid-19 pandemic
Citation
Karahisar, T., Ünlüer, A. O. (2022). A research on distance education and alienation in academic staff during the Covid-19 pandemic. The Turkish Online Journal of Distance Education (TOJDE), 23 (3), 68-85.Abstract
With the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic, countries have had to review their education policies and
make adjustments accordingly. In this regard, distance education has been adopted in universities in
Turkiye, and each university has created its own distance education strategy. Distance education, once
only a complementary to education, replaced traditional education when the pandemic turned out to be
unlikely to end in the short run. Although some universities are experienced in distance education, this
sudden pandemic has caused disruptions (digital inequality, technological infrastructure problems, etc.) and
unprecedented situations catching most universities off-guard. One of these is the emergence or the change
of alienation seen in academic staff due to distance education. The aim of the study is to identify the work
alienation of academics during the Covid-19 pandemic and reveal the underlying reasons, with the help of
semi-structured interview technique within the framework of the phenomenological approach, one of the
qualitative research methods. For this purpose, interviews through the Google Meet application were held
with 12 academics. Content analysis was applied to the data obtained from these interviews. As a result, it
was found that the interviewed academics were adversely affected by the distance education method and they
were not competent enough to use it. It was also revealed that they were unable to identify their demands
regarding their economical and technical needs yet at the same time they were not satisfied with the support
provided by their institutions.