Publication | Open Access
Online teaching, procrastination and student achievement
32
Citations
35
References
2023
Year
Teacher EducationItalian UniversityE-learningBehavioral SciencesOnline Learning EnvironmentEducational PsychologyOnline TeachingEducationOnline LearningLearning AnalyticsOnline EducationForced TransitionOnline Course DevelopmentStudent OutcomeHigher EducationSelf-regulated Learning
Despite growing consensus in the public debate that self-discipline is key to succeeding in an online learning environment, the evidence available is very limited. We investigate the role of procrastination as a moderator of the impact of online teaching on student performance. We take advantage of the forced transition from traditional class-based to online teaching induced by the COVID-19 pandemic and adopt a difference-in-differences strategy using administrative data of four cohorts of students enrolled in an Italian University. We find that online teaching has reduced student performance by about 1.4 credits per semester on average (0.11 Standard Deviations). However, this aggregate effect masks great heterogeneity as the negative influence on performance varies significantly according to student tendency to procrastinate with online teaching being particularly detrimental for students affected by present-bias problems. The total negative effect for procrastinators amounts to more than 18% of the workload for a semester, so implying a potential delay of approximately two semesters in the expected date of graduation for students following an online as opposed to a face-to-face five-year Degree course.
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