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Angel Cruz; Barry Nash; Daniel Holloman; Joyce Yao – Journal of Extension, 2025
During the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic, the global lockdowns changed the way food was accessed and prepared. These changes at the consumer level impacted farms and fisheries of all types and sizes. To compensate for the loss of larger markets and restaurant revenue, small-scale food producers pivoted to direct marketing to remain viable during…
Descriptors: Internship Programs, COVID-19, Pandemics, Food
John Weng; Linnette Werner; Tim Steffensmeier – New Directions for Student Leadership, 2024
In a post-pandemic context, the need for leadership students to navigate ambiguous conditions and examine their automatic responses to authority has increased. Yet, common approaches to teaching leadership, such as group discussions and simulations, overlook the potential for using development spaces as living laboratories. This article explores…
Descriptors: Leadership, Leadership Training, Teaching Methods, Student Behavior
Holly Hungerford-Kresser; Molly Wiant Cummins; Carla Amaro-Jiménez – Journal of Educational Change, 2024
As we settled into a new reality with COVID-19, there were calls for educators to use the crisis as a time to initiate changes desperately needed in education (Zhao & Watterston, 2021). Highlighting an elementary school as a case study (Hungerford-Kresser et al., 2022), we now reflect on what we learned during the early stages of the pandemic,…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Caring, Elementary Schools
Opertti, Renato – UNESCO International Bureau of Education, 2023
The transformation of education and education systems has emerged as a universal agenda across a broad range of societies. Despite the enormous differences both between and within countries--differences that have been exacerbated by the pandemic--there is a general awareness globally that profound changes in educational purposes, content, and…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, COVID-19, Pandemics, Curriculum
Kelsey S. Bitting; Michael S. Sweet – International Journal for Academic Development, 2025
In the post-COVID era, many faculty are experiencing a variety of interlinked burnout-related emotional experiences, including classical work stress burnout, decision fatigue from frequent adaptation and change, and compassion fatigue related to the caring demands of the profession. In this manuscript, we detail a framework for understanding the…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Teacher Burnout, Prevention, Teacher Responsibility
Justyna Sarnowska; Paula Pustulka; Justyna Kajta – European Journal of Education, 2024
This paper focuses on individual responses to education in crisis, with the strategies of students contextualised and examined within a wider multi-crisis reality. Offering a conceptual framework of social solvation, the proposed model explains how failures in the education system at the macro (state) and meso (institutional) levels translate into…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, Crisis Management
Lee A. Coppock – Journal of Economic Education, 2025
The COVID-19 pandemic uniquely affected nearly all the subject matter in a typical principles of macroeconomics class. Fluctuations in the basic macroeconomic data in the COVID era were staggering and offer new teaching opportunities. In addition, because the recession was primarily driven by supply side shocks, the entire episode offers a unique…
Descriptors: Macroeconomics, COVID-19, Pandemics, Teaching Methods
Emiliano Grimaldi; Francesca Peruzzo; Stephen J. Ball – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2025
In this article, we explore how digitalisation, digital education policies and the strategies of the edtech sector are re-crafting education as a site for the extension of the economic form of the market. Drawing on the work of Michel Callon and focusing on the case of Italy, we consider how policy, commercialisation and changes in educational…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Technology, Free Enterprise System, Educational Policy
Harwood, Nicole – BU Journal of Graduate Studies in Education, 2023
As a result of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the term "resiliency" has led to much discussion in many educational settings. Resiliency is a profound word and it is through further exploration of its meaning that I seek to garner new insights into what is needed in order to strengthen both student and teacher resiliency, and to provide…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), COVID-19, Pandemics, Student Experience
Jennifer Collar – English in Texas, 2023
Composition instructors must contend with and rise above the challenges that now exist in the post-pandemic college composition classroom. Students today are not the same types of students who filled classrooms prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. This article discusses post-pandemic challenges in college composition classrooms and aims to equip…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Writing (Composition), COVID-19, Pandemics
Vanessa Hinton; Yusuf Akemoglu; Kimberly Tomeny; Robin A. McWilliam – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2024
Early intervention is a system of services designed to strengthen child outcomes and build family capacity. One approach of service provision is the Routines-Based Model which implements adult-learning practices wherein service providers and caregivers partner to build family-mediated interventions for children. Owing to COVID-19 and the benefits…
Descriptors: Early Intervention, COVID-19, Pandemics, Telecommunications
Amy Markos; Ray Buss; Josephine Marsh – Impacting Education: Journal on Transforming Professional Practice, 2024
In this practice-based essay, we illustrated how our program, a charter member of The Carnegie Project on the Education Doctorate (CPED) and a recipient of a CPED Program of the Year Award in 2018, has moved from reacting to pandemic-era needs, to reflecting on pandemic-era adaptations, to re-imagining our EdD program. Focusing on three areas:…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Programs, College Students
Lisa Huisman Koops; Beatriz Ilari; Gina Yi; Katherine Palmer; Tiago Madalozzo; Vivian Madalozzo; Alfredo Bautista; Elizabeth Andang'o – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
In early 2021, early childhood music educators and researchers from six global regions contributed to a book chapter documenting that state of early childhood music education during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic. Over three years have passed since the onset of the global pandemic. This article represents an update from five of the six…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Music Education, COVID-19, Pandemics
Guillermo Marini – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2025
This paper explores sensory perception in classrooms, and the relationship between classrooms and nature in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. First, it argues that this crisis provides a unique opportunity to rethink how we perceive classrooms and their connection with nature. Second, the paper describes what students and teachers usually see,…
Descriptors: Sensory Experience, Perception, Natural Resources, COVID-19
Julia Gouzman; Varda Soskolne; Rachel Dekel – Journal of Intellectual Disabilities, 2024
A growing body of evidence has attested to the higher impact of COVID-19 on individuals with intellectual disabilities (IDs) than on members of the general population during the pandemic, mainly showing their higher vulnerability. However, we believe it is important to better understand how their situation interacts with the specific circumstances…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Intellectual Disability, Crisis Management

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