Experiences of biomedical sciences students and staff in blended learning during the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown in a University of Technology, Durban, KwaZulu-Natal
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Abstract
This study explored and described the experiences of biomedical sciences students
and staff who used blended teaching and learning during COVID-19 pandemic. To
follow social distancing protocol, limited number of students and staff were permitted
on campus at a time, while others were online to limit the spread of severe acute
respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2 virus). The objective of this study
was to determine and recommend the necessary resources and skills needed by
biomedical sciences students and staff for blended learning at a historically
disadvantaged university of technology and better prepare for future pandemics. The
aim is to help the university stakeholders to budget, invest, and direct resources and
skills for blended teaching and learning appropriately.
Purposeful sampling was used to select 14 participants from biomedical science
population of 100 students and 14 staff (eight lecturers, 3 laboratory technicians, two
laboratory assistants and one secretary). Purposeful sampling was chosen as it is
characterized by the intentional selection of units pertinent to the study issue as it
strategically focuses on traits within a population, enabling researchers to gather rich,
contextual data. Qualitative descriptive content analysis research method was chosen
to make replicable and valid inferences of the phenomenon from texts. Semi structured individual interviews were used to collect data and data was analyzed
continuously using descriptive content analysis. Participants were interviewed until
data reached data saturation.
The results of this study showed that staff and students were unprepared for the
emergency transformation. There were disparities in students’ device access and
availability, students' digital skills; some had basic knowledge of computers, while
others had none. Students and staff had challenges of poor internet connection due to
load shedding and poor infrastructure, but students in rural areas had worse network
connections than those in urban areas. Students and staff had to learn how to navigate
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the learning management systems (LMSs) on the run, as most of them were unfamiliar
with those systems.
Laboratory practical experiments took longer as students were divided into small
groups to observe social distancing protocol of COVID-19 pandemic, students worked
individually rather than in pairs, and load shedding occasionally caused tests to be
postponed. Online assessments compromised the quality of education, and some
students cheated as staff could not monitor students online due to a lack of electronic proctoring tools. At times, students could not submit assignments and tests on time
due to poor network connections or load shedding. Despite the challenges and
unpleasant experience that students and staff faced during COVID-19 blended
teaching and learning, blended learning achieved the learning objectives.
The report makes several recommendations for infrastructure support, including giving
out laptops and/or data to students in need, upgrading lecture halls to smart
classrooms, offering computer training on learning management systems and
continuous support to students and staff, to increase proficiency and preparedness,
and lastly designing a blended learning approach suitable for biomedical science
Description
Dissertation submitted in partial compliance with the requirements for the Master’s Degree in Medical Laboratory Medicine, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2025.
Citation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/6248
