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Stress development during emergency remote teaching in higher education

  • Ramona Obermeier
  • , Michaela Gläser-Zikuda
  • , Svenja Bedenlier
  • , Rudolf Kammerl
  • , Bärbel Kopp
  • , Albert Ziegler
  • , Marion Händel

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Higher education includes e-learning in addition to on-site learning. Still, the shift to Emergency Remote Teaching (ERT) as reaction to the Covid-19 pandemic in the summer semester 2020, presented a challenging situation for students. Cross-sectional studies pointed towards higher stress levels of students. However, only a few studies addressed the development of students' stress across several dimensions (joy, worry, tension, demands) within one semester. The current study analyzed trajectories of stress in ERT in relation to age, gender, digital readiness, and experience of loneliness, based on a sample of N = 2795 German students. Latent Growth Curve Models (LGCM) revealed a significant increase in demands, tension and worries and a decrease in joy during the summer term 2020. The development of tension and demands was influenced by age, gender, digital readiness, and loneliness. The decrease in joy and increase in worries could be primarily attributed to digital readiness and loneliness.
Original languageEnglish
Article number102178
Number of pages10
JournalLearning and Individual Differences
Volume98
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2022

Fields of science

  • 503 Educational Sciences
  • 503007 Didactics
  • 503011 Subject didactics of humanities
  • 503014 Subject didactics of social sciences
  • 503033 Political education
  • 501005 Developmental psychology
  • 501016 Educational psychology
  • 503006 Educational research
  • 503025 School pedagogy
  • 503032 Teaching and learning research

JKU Focus areas

  • Digital Transformation

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