Perceived Educational Barriers in the New Normal Among Nursing Students

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15631/ubmrj.v10i1.166

Keywords:

Personal, Technological, Socioeconomic Barriers, Perceived Barrier, New Normal

Abstract

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the sudden shift from face-to-face lectures to online learning created barriers to students' learning process. These issues have prompted researchers to explore the perceived educational barriers in the new normal, especially among nursing students. This study aims to identify the perceived educational barriers of the new normal among the 200 nursing students at the University of Bohol. This is a quantitative-descriptive research design aided with a self-constructed questionnaire distributed using the online platform, following the ethical guidelines. The tool was pilot-tested and garnered a Cronbach's result of 0.721, which passes the acceptability standard. The gathered data were subjected statistically. Results have shown that respondents have been moderately affected by personal and technological barriers. Socioeconomic barriers were present but rarely affect the respondents. The study concludes that the demographic profile of 200 nursing students did not fully influence their perceived educational barriers. These perceived barriers only moderately affect the respondents; it reveals that distractions, lag devices due to multitasking, and noisy environments primarily affect the students.

References

Alampay, L. P., & Garcia, A. S. (2019). Education and Parenting in the Philippines. School Systems, Parent Behavior, and Academic Achievement, 79–94. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-28277-6_7. https://bit.ly/3SyPsb4

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Published

2022-09-10

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