TY - JOUR
T1 - WHATSAPP’S POTENTIAL TO BROADEN ONLINE TEACHING AND LEARNING
T2 - PERCEPTIONS OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS FROM ONE SOUTH AFRICAN UNIVERSITY
AU - Yu, Ke
AU - Motlhabane, Monicah Gao
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, Journal of Information Technology Education: Research. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Aim/Purpose Social media platforms have been increasingly incorporated into teaching and learning. However, studies using mixed methods to explore WhatsApp’s poten-tial to broaden online teaching and learning remain limited. Background This study reports the experiences and perspectives of undergraduate students in terms of their WhatsApp usage patterns and preferences during COVID-19 using a sequential mixed method. Methodology Through a quantitative survey of undergraduate students from the Education Faculty in one South African university, quantitative data were collected from 92 participants. Qualitative interviews were followed with ten willing participants to further explore their perceptions and preference. Contribution This study addresses the literature gap identified by Klein et al. (2018, p. 2) that “few studies that explore WhatsApp use in the natural environment of higher education” and the methodology gap Hashim identifies (2018) that the majority of the literature adopts a quantitative research methodology while only 10% use the mixed method. Our intention is set specifically on WhatsApp’s potential to broaden online teaching as the new norm beyond merely as a supplement teaching platform be-fore COVID-19 or emergency remote teaching mode that WhatsApp serves since the onset of COVID-19. We triangulated the behaviors and perceptions of first-time WhatsApp users (scarcely separately discussed in the literature) and gender to ascertain lessons for more targeted strategies for more effective WhatsApp use. Another unique feature and novelty of this study is our separate analysis of ac-tive (e.g., initiating query or discussion) and passive use (e.g., receiving infor-mation). Findings Our findings confirm that COVID-19 has accelerated universities’ digital transi-tion as WhatsApp’s usage has undergone a great expansion from informal to formal spaces. However, informal use among students remains strong, particu-larly among first-time WhatsApp users. Communication remains one of the pri-mary functions of WhatsApp in teaching and learning, but content-related functions and student discussion activities are clearly feasible and prevalent. However, passive use remains slightly more prevalent than active use even amongst frequent WhatsApp users. WhatsApp’s assignment-related usage is high but mainly limited to queries rather than assessment submissions or mark-ing. Both WhatsApp’s usage and perceived usefulness has surpassed that of e-mail and of the university’s learning management system (LMS) where WhatsApp group functions seem to have contributed greatly to the perceived usefulness. Articulated advantages and challenges of WhatsApp largely corrob-orate with those identified in the literature, although our participants show some ambiguity concerning WhatsApp’s low cost as its main benefit. Recommendations for Practitioners WhatsApp’s usages are versatile. So are its perceived benefits. However, practi-tioners need to consciously encourage its usage beyond passive use and also consider how WhatsApp can be incorporated into marking. Recommendations for Researchers We found inconsistency regarding perceived benefits related to WhatsApp’s cost. Cost is important in low resource context and this inconsistency merits further examination. Our finding regarding WhatsApp’s limitation in terms of marking is not consistent with some literature. As marking functionality impacts broadening WhatsApp’s usage in teaching and learning, how WhatsApp has and potentially can be incorporated into LMS should be further explored. Impact on Society WhatsApp has great potential to broaden online learning in higher education. However, it also has its limitation. This study demonstrates that WhatsApp can serve most teaching and learning functions in higher education. However, how these benefits and limitations impact different groups of users (e.g., 1st-time us-ers, frequent users, gender, etc.) should be more consciously thought of, so is how more active use can be encouraged. Future Research Further studies should examine whether the low cost is an important considera-tion in students’ preference for WhatsApp. Further studies should also explore how WhatsApp can be better used for marking.
AB - Aim/Purpose Social media platforms have been increasingly incorporated into teaching and learning. However, studies using mixed methods to explore WhatsApp’s poten-tial to broaden online teaching and learning remain limited. Background This study reports the experiences and perspectives of undergraduate students in terms of their WhatsApp usage patterns and preferences during COVID-19 using a sequential mixed method. Methodology Through a quantitative survey of undergraduate students from the Education Faculty in one South African university, quantitative data were collected from 92 participants. Qualitative interviews were followed with ten willing participants to further explore their perceptions and preference. Contribution This study addresses the literature gap identified by Klein et al. (2018, p. 2) that “few studies that explore WhatsApp use in the natural environment of higher education” and the methodology gap Hashim identifies (2018) that the majority of the literature adopts a quantitative research methodology while only 10% use the mixed method. Our intention is set specifically on WhatsApp’s potential to broaden online teaching as the new norm beyond merely as a supplement teaching platform be-fore COVID-19 or emergency remote teaching mode that WhatsApp serves since the onset of COVID-19. We triangulated the behaviors and perceptions of first-time WhatsApp users (scarcely separately discussed in the literature) and gender to ascertain lessons for more targeted strategies for more effective WhatsApp use. Another unique feature and novelty of this study is our separate analysis of ac-tive (e.g., initiating query or discussion) and passive use (e.g., receiving infor-mation). Findings Our findings confirm that COVID-19 has accelerated universities’ digital transi-tion as WhatsApp’s usage has undergone a great expansion from informal to formal spaces. However, informal use among students remains strong, particu-larly among first-time WhatsApp users. Communication remains one of the pri-mary functions of WhatsApp in teaching and learning, but content-related functions and student discussion activities are clearly feasible and prevalent. However, passive use remains slightly more prevalent than active use even amongst frequent WhatsApp users. WhatsApp’s assignment-related usage is high but mainly limited to queries rather than assessment submissions or mark-ing. Both WhatsApp’s usage and perceived usefulness has surpassed that of e-mail and of the university’s learning management system (LMS) where WhatsApp group functions seem to have contributed greatly to the perceived usefulness. Articulated advantages and challenges of WhatsApp largely corrob-orate with those identified in the literature, although our participants show some ambiguity concerning WhatsApp’s low cost as its main benefit. Recommendations for Practitioners WhatsApp’s usages are versatile. So are its perceived benefits. However, practi-tioners need to consciously encourage its usage beyond passive use and also consider how WhatsApp can be incorporated into marking. Recommendations for Researchers We found inconsistency regarding perceived benefits related to WhatsApp’s cost. Cost is important in low resource context and this inconsistency merits further examination. Our finding regarding WhatsApp’s limitation in terms of marking is not consistent with some literature. As marking functionality impacts broadening WhatsApp’s usage in teaching and learning, how WhatsApp has and potentially can be incorporated into LMS should be further explored. Impact on Society WhatsApp has great potential to broaden online learning in higher education. However, it also has its limitation. This study demonstrates that WhatsApp can serve most teaching and learning functions in higher education. However, how these benefits and limitations impact different groups of users (e.g., 1st-time us-ers, frequent users, gender, etc.) should be more consciously thought of, so is how more active use can be encouraged. Future Research Further studies should examine whether the low cost is an important considera-tion in students’ preference for WhatsApp. Further studies should also explore how WhatsApp can be better used for marking.
KW - Covid-19
KW - Online teaching and learning
KW - South africa
KW - University
KW - Whatsapp
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85143852814&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.28945/5031
DO - 10.28945/5031
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85143852814
SN - 1547-9714
VL - 21
SP - 547
EP - 569
JO - Journal of Information Technology Education:Research
JF - Journal of Information Technology Education:Research
ER -