TY - JOUR
T1 - Intercultural dialogues in Covid-19: digital culture, innovation, and online pedagogy in higher education
AU - Lima Paniago, Maria Cristina
AU - da Cunha Moura, Gustavo Henrique
AU - Brum Arguelho, Miriam
AU - Devecchi, Cristina
PY - 2022/9/25
Y1 - 2022/9/25
N2 - This paper explores how conversations about digital culture, innovation, and online pedagogy can inform practices accentuated during the pandemic. The Immediatism adopted by universities around the world due to the urgency of lockdowns is problematic in many ways. Firstly, the little time to switch to an online environment, advance online delivery, and ensure assessment is undeniable. Second, the extent to which universities were at different levels of digitally ready infrastructure and related staff and students' development, training, and readiness to learn and teach remotely is also challenging. However, research shows the important role of digital culture in pedagogical choices inside the classroom, as much as it considers how individual cope with technological innovation in their daily online practices. From a Freirean perspective, pedagogies reflective and transformative and online pedagogies can reconceptialize ecologies of learning for an inclusive pedagogy. This paper addresses the above by presenting data from interviews with instructors, administrative staff and students at three universities in Brzil, Canada, and the UK. This qualitative study uses intercultural concepts of pedagogical innovation, and how participants have adapted their practices in digital culture. We further explore the pedagogical implications of their attitudes towards online learning, the reconstruction of their self-awareness, and aim at corroborating future comprehension on how COVIUD-19 will impact higher education. This paper is timely in problematizing concepts that are important in understanding and dealing with digital culture, innovation, and online pedagogies in learning context post-COVID
AB - This paper explores how conversations about digital culture, innovation, and online pedagogy can inform practices accentuated during the pandemic. The Immediatism adopted by universities around the world due to the urgency of lockdowns is problematic in many ways. Firstly, the little time to switch to an online environment, advance online delivery, and ensure assessment is undeniable. Second, the extent to which universities were at different levels of digitally ready infrastructure and related staff and students' development, training, and readiness to learn and teach remotely is also challenging. However, research shows the important role of digital culture in pedagogical choices inside the classroom, as much as it considers how individual cope with technological innovation in their daily online practices. From a Freirean perspective, pedagogies reflective and transformative and online pedagogies can reconceptialize ecologies of learning for an inclusive pedagogy. This paper addresses the above by presenting data from interviews with instructors, administrative staff and students at three universities in Brzil, Canada, and the UK. This qualitative study uses intercultural concepts of pedagogical innovation, and how participants have adapted their practices in digital culture. We further explore the pedagogical implications of their attitudes towards online learning, the reconstruction of their self-awareness, and aim at corroborating future comprehension on how COVIUD-19 will impact higher education. This paper is timely in problematizing concepts that are important in understanding and dealing with digital culture, innovation, and online pedagogies in learning context post-COVID
KW - Intercultural
KW - innovation
KW - Online pedagogy
KW - Digital culture
KW - COVID-19
U2 - 10.55028/edutec.v2i1.15346
DO - 10.55028/edutec.v2i1.15346
M3 - Article
SN - 2764-9067
VL - 2
JO - Revista EDUTEC
JF - Revista EDUTEC
IS - 1
M1 - 5
ER -