Economic Aspects of Emergency Transition to Distance Education, or The Price of Going Online in Higher Education
Viola Larionova (),
Tatiana Semenova,
Elena Murzakhanova and
Liudmila Daineko
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Tatiana Semenova: http://www.hse.ru/en/staff/tsemenova
Voprosy obrazovaniya / Educational Studies Moscow, 2021, issue 1, 138-157
Abstract:
Viola Larionova - Candidate of Sciences in Mathematical Physics, Assistant Professor, Deputy Vice Rector for Education Technology, Head of the Department of Economics and Management, Ural Federal University named after the 1st President of Russia B.N. Yeltsin.Address: 19 Mira Str., 620002 Yekaterinburg, Russian Federation. E-mail: v.a.larionova@urfu.ru (Corresponding author) Tatiana Semenova - Research Fellow, Center of Sociology of Higher Education, Institute of Education, National Research University Higher School of Economics.Address: Bld. 10, 16 Potapovsky Ln, 101000 Moscow, Russian Federation. E-mail: tsemenova@hse.ru Elena Murzakhanova - Postgraduate Student, Department of Economics and Management, Ural Federal University named after the 1st President of Russia B.N. Yeltsin. E-mail: e.m.babenkova@urfu.ru Liudmila Daineko - Senior Lecturer, Department of Economics and Management, Ural Federal University named after the 1st President of Russia B.N. Yeltsin. E-mail: l.v.daineko@urfu.ruAddress: 19 Mira Str., 620002 Yekaterinburg, Russian Federation. As Russian universities switched to distance education in March 2020 to prevent COVID-19 from spreading, self-paying students started questioning the fairness of tuition fees during the pandemic. They filed petitions, emphasizing that distance learning could not be equated to traditional classroom-based learning, that educational services were not delivered to the full extent, and that educational quality had decreased. On those grounds, students required cutting tuition fees down to the size of those in part-time or extramural education. To understand whether universities can afford making this step, we undertake to measure the price that they have paid for the transition to distance learning.For this purpose, we use data from a survey of faculty teaching and curriculum organization practices carried out at a federal university between March 23, 2020 and June21, 2020, which involved 4,099 faculty members, as well as financial records of some departments within that university. Findings show that teaching workload reduced by 15% with distance learning during the pandemic, and the number of contact hours decreased 1.7 times. However, the overall amount of faculty workload increased by 50%, first of all due to a 2.4-time rise in curriculum organization activities. Therefore, the transition to distance education led to a significant increase in faculty workload, given that contact hours were preserved. Furthermore, the university invested heavily in the transition to distance learning and continuity of educational processes during the pandemic, in particular by financing the establishment of a new department for digitalization of learning processes.An inference is made that distance education imposed by the pandemic has not been reduced to part-time or extramural studies. Decisions about cutting tuition fees for self-paying students should be made at the institutional level, with due regard for faculty workload and digitization costs.
Keywords: distance education; COVID-19 pandemic; tuition fees; direct expenses; indirect expenses (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
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