4.6 Article

The Motivation of Academics in Remote Teaching during the Covid-19 Pandemic in Polish Universities-Opening the Debate on a New Equilibrium in e-Learning

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13052752

Keywords

motivating job potential; Covid-19; e-learning; online; teaching; teachers

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Higher Education in Poland under the programme Regional Initiative of Excellence 2019-2022 [015/RID/2018/19]

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The study showed that academic teachers perceived lower motivating job potential during the Covid-19 e-learning period, which is associated with work engagement and job satisfaction. Additionally, teachers' assessment of university management actions during the pandemic may moderate the relationship between motivating job potential and job satisfaction.
Online learning helps to continue education in the face of Covid-19 lockdowns and social isolation, but it might largely change characteristics of academic teachers' jobs and, thus, have some unintended consequences for teachers' motivating job potential. In this study, using a convenience sample of 202 academic teachers, we tested and supported the hypothesis that academic teachers perceived their motivating job potential as lower during the forced Covid-19 e-learning than before it. We also provided evidence that motivating potential of work during the forced Covid-19 e-learning is associated with work engagement and job satisfaction. Moreover, we provided a modicum of evidence that the relationship between the motivating job potential and academic teachers' job satisfaction might be moderated by teachers' assessment of university management actions during the Covid-19 situation, such that this association seems to be stronger among teachers who more positively assess university management. Our results provided initial evidence of possible unintended consequences of the pandemic-forced e-learning for academic teachers. Therefore, we suggested that socially sustainable e-learning required not only concentration on students and organizations of the education process but also on improving the teachers' motivating job potential.

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