Students’ Perceptions of ESP Online Pedagogy during COVID-19 and Pedagogical Transitions in a Nepali University: Case Studies and Embedded Action Research

Authors

  • Haris Chand Adhikari Assistant Professor, English and Communication, Kathmandu University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/nelta.v28i1.61796

Keywords:

ESP, COVID-19, Makeshift Pedagogies, Pedagogic Transitions, Student Perceptions

Abstract

This study explores undergraduate students’ perceptions of online pedagogy (OP) practiced during COVID-19 pandemic and blended pedagogy (BP)/ blended teaching and learning (BTL) currently in practice in the post-pandemic times in ESP courses at Kathmandu University School of Law (KUSL), Nepal. While essentially a study of two case studies, it also develops as embedded informal action research (Beck, 2017). The study reveals that both OP and BP/ BTL, despite many transitions, function(ed) only as makeshift pedagogies in the local context, which is not how they are taken in their mainstream uses. It first highlights the majority voice for continuing using helpful elements from OP (with improvements) in the conventional mode, diagnoses numerous problems associated with the pedagogy, and identifi es spaces to bring about improvements in. It then examines the transitions, including BP/ BTL, which reveal that OP has been instrumental in encouraging the practitioners to increasingly embrace BP/ BTL for its immense usefulness. However, (collective) institutional readiness in investing in major OP and BP/ BTL resources and technologies seriously lacked/ lacks. These fi ndings, with local and global literature aside, also help to successively build and refi ne the conceptual framework used. Finally, the study forwards useful implications and suggestions for those who have been practicing similar pedagogies in similar contexts.

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Author Biography

Haris Chand Adhikari, Assistant Professor, English and Communication, Kathmandu University

Haris C. Adhikari, assistant professor of English and communication at Kathmandu University (KU), maintains strong interest in creative process studies, innovative pedagogies, writing research, and arts-based research. Author of three books of poetry and literary translation, he co-edits Polysemy at KU and reviews works of artistic research for Art/Research International (Canada).

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Published

2023-12-31

How to Cite

Adhikari, H. C. (2023). Students’ Perceptions of ESP Online Pedagogy during COVID-19 and Pedagogical Transitions in a Nepali University: Case Studies and Embedded Action Research. Journal of NELTA, 28(1), 121–150. https://doi.org/10.3126/nelta.v28i1.61796

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Section

Articles