The Effects of Distance Learning on Teachers in a Rural Title 1 Elementary Education Setting

Authors

  • Chelsey Walters Oklahoma State University
  • Dr. Alesha Baker Northeastern State University
  • Michele Shell

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3776/tpre.2023.v13n1p70-98

Keywords:

rural education, teacher perception, social learning, distance learning, rural technology

Abstract

Following the sudden switch from in-person to distance learning during the COVID-19 pandemic, much research has been conducted about student learning. However, little information is available about the perception of rural teachers during this time. In this qualitative study, researchers interviewed three rural Title I elementary school teachers. Through thematic qualitative analysis, researchers found that there is an intimate link between the rural community’s beliefs about education and the way the teachers perceive their roles in distance learning. The teachers in rural communities view learning and teaching as a social activity that was inhibited by the challenges faced during distance learning despite the support of the community and administration. Teachers overwhelmingly felt that the distance in distance learning inhibited the ability for them to teach and concluded that true learning happens best in an in-person setting.

Author Biographies

Chelsey Walters, Oklahoma State University

Chelsey Walters, M.Ed., is an adjunct professor at Tulsa Community College in Tulsa, Oklahoma and a doctoral student of Curriculum Studies at Oklahoma State University. She has her bachelor’s degree in Elementary Education and Spanish Language from the University of Colorado at Boulder and her master’s degree in Reading Education from Northeastern State University at Broken Arrow, Oklahoma. She is a scholar of reading education, English language, and language arts curriculum with research interests in rural literacy education, rural K-12 education, and rural communities. mrs.chelseywalters@gmail.com

Dr. Alesha Baker, Northeastern State University

Alesha Baker, Ph.D., is an associate professor in the Educational Leadership Department and the Chair for the Library Media and Information Technology program at Northeastern State University. She earned her Ph.D. in Educational Technology from Oklahoma State University. Dr. Baker has 13 years of experience in PK-12 with the last three of those years serving as an elementary school librarian. Dr. Baker has published multiple peer-reviewed book chapters and research articles on topics related to technology integration in the classroom and school library, the school librarian’s role in resource curation, open educational resource use in higher education and global PK-12 settings, social media use for teacher professional development, and teacher professional development effectiveness. She has presented at numerous local, state, national, and international conferences sharing her research and findings with other educators. bakera@nsuok.edu

Michele Shell

Michele Shell, M.S., works at Northeastern State University as the Graduate College Coordinator, Recruitment & Engagement. She has her bachelor’s degree in University Studies from Oklahoma State University and her master’s degree in Library Media and information Technology from Northeastern State University. michele.shell@cox.net

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Published

2023-06-19

How to Cite

Walters, C., Baker, A., & Shell, M. (2023). The Effects of Distance Learning on Teachers in a Rural Title 1 Elementary Education Setting. Theory & Practice in Rural Education, 13(1), 70–98. https://doi.org/10.3776/tpre.2023.v13n1p70-98