Reading through the Pandemic: Promoting Active Digital Engagement with Text-Based Resources
Author(s)
Matt East (17682402)Graham Barrett (17153584)
Jonathan Fitzgibbons (17157847)
Michele Vescovi (17169214)
Jamie Wood (17170327)
Keywords
V100 - History by periodV140 - Modern history
V350 - History of art
X200 - Research & study skills in education
X342 - Academic studies in higher education
annotation
collaboration
digital texts
e-learning
higher education
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Show full item recordAbstract
This small-scale study highlights some of the challenges faced teaching first-year undergraduate History students during the Covid-19 pandemic in the 2019-20 and 2020-21 academic years and outlines the strategies that were put in place to address them. The article describes how Talis Elevate, an online tool that enables students to engage actively and collaboratively with digitised readings, was deployed across a range of first-year modules in History at the University of Lincoln. Feedback from staff and students is analysed, alongside user data collected by the Talis Elevate tool. The article demonstrates that a structured approach to engaging students in online reading tasks in preparation for class functioned effectively as a driver for student learning, but that some of the issues associated with engaging students in face-to-face teaching spaces, such as the reluctance of some students to contribute to discussion, were replicated online.Date
2023-06-19Type
TextIdentifier
oai:figshare.com:article/2487648310779/lincoln.24876483.v1