The New Normal-Revised Paper
The New Normal-Revised Paper
The New Normal-Revised Paper
A Research Paper
Presented to the
College of Business Administration and Accountancy
Philippine Christian University
1648 Pedro Gil Cor. Taft Avenue, Manila
In partial fulfillment
of the Requirements for
Business Research
Submitted by:
Submitted to:
June , 2021
TABLE OF CONTENTS
TITLE PAGE
ABSTRACT
Conceptual Framework 9
Conceptual Paradigm 9
Statement of Hypothesis 10
Research Objectives 11
Definition of Terms 12
Local Literature 15
Foreign Literature 19
Research Design 23
Sampling Design 24
3
Research Instrument 24
Data Gathering 24
Conclusion 37
Recommendation 38
APPENDICES
DEDICATION
4
LIST OF FIGURES
1 Conceptual Framework 9
2 Gender 28
3 Age 29
4 Year Level 30
LIST OF TABLES
1 Likert Scale 27
2 Frequency of the Effects of 33
ABSTRACT
This study analyzes the effects of COVID-19 confinement on the autonomous
learning performance of students in higher education at Philippine Christian University.
We study the differences in assessments by dividing students into two groups. The first
group (control) corresponds to academic years 2017/2018 and 2018/2019. The second
group (experimental) corresponds to students from 2019/2020, which is the group of
students that had their face-to-face activities interrupted because of the confinement.
The results show that there is a significant positive effect of the COVID-19
confinement on students’ performance. This effect is also significant in activities that did
not change their format when performed after the confinement. We find that this effect
is significant both in subjects that increased the number of assessment activities and
subjects that did not change the student workload.
Additionally, an analysis of students’ learning strategies before confinement
shows that students did not study on a continuous basis. Based on these results, we
conclude that COVID-19 confinement changed students’ learning strategies to a more
continuous habit, improving their efficiency. For these reasons, better scores in
students’ assessment are expected due to COVID-19 confinement that can be explained
by an improvement in their learning performance.
6
For almost eight pandemic months, most countries around the world have
temporarily closed educational institutions to contain the spread of the COVID-19
pandemic and reduce infections (UNESCO, 2020). This closure has affected more than
1.2 billion learners worldwide with more than 28 million learners in the Philippines
(UNESCO, 2020). Responses like community lockdown and community quarantine of
several countries have led students and teachers to study and work from home which
led to the delivery of online learning platforms (Crawford et al., 2020). However, the
implementation of online learning posed different risks, problems and challenges to
both the teachers and students, especially in the higher education institutions (HEIs)
(Bao, 2020). In the Philippines, there are 411,736 cases as of November 17, 2020 and
is still increasing (DOH, 2020) with more than fifty-five million cases worldwide
(Worldometer, 2020). In response to these situations, educational leaders decided to
adopt the new normal in education. In the higher education sector, the Commission on
Higher Education, HEIs were given academic freedom to implement available distance
learning, e-learning, and other alternative modes of delivery to students (CHED, 2020).
Several universities have opted to implement their own policies regarding instruction
and opening of classes starting September 2020. It will be the “new normal” in
education and strengthening educational planning and health is a concern to provide
quality, inclusive and accessible education for every student.
This research highlights policy implications, strategies and issues that will arise in
the new normal education, particularly in the Philippines. Several implications have
been discussed when the new normal comes, namely: wearing of face masks and
physical distancing, strengthening online platforms, research and development and
program creation and health integration.
ZPOA-HQEQ
INDEPENDENT PROCESS OUTPUT
VARIABLES
Interviews Outcomes
Demographics Questionnaires Effects
Students Surveys Recommendations
Parents
8
Conceptual Paradigm
This study zeroes in on the effects of the new normal to the students of
Philippine Christian University. The researcher based their assumption from Weiner’s
Attribution Theory that independent variables and process can provide output.
For example, demographics, students and parents (independent variables) is the
basis for interviews, questionnaires and surveys (process) that can provide outcomes,
effects and recommendations in the said study. These relationships are illustrated in
Figure 1.
STATEMENT OF HYPOTHESIS
RESEARCH OBJECTIVES
This research aims to evaluate the clear view of the new normal in the
educational sectors here in the Philippines due to COVID-19.
1. Determine the approaches and strategies used by the government for the
students in the blended-learning type of education.
2. Assess the factors in educational sectors that need to be considered in the
COVID-19 pandemic.
3. Establish the challenges and problems that need to face for future references.
DEFINITION OF TERMS
1. COVID-19: Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is an infectious disease caused by
a newly discovered coronavirus.
Most people infected with the COVID-19 virus will experience mild to
moderate respiratory illness and recover without requiring special treatment.
Older people, and those with underlying medical problems like cardiovascular
disease, diabetes, chronic respiratory disease, and cancer are more likely to
develop serious illness.
11
LOCAL LITERATURE:
Within the new normal, the situation presents a unique challenge to every
educational leader’s decision-making process. Hence, to sustain the delivery of quality
of instruction to every school, this article presents opportunities for responding issues,
problems and trends that are arising and will arise in the future due to COVID-19
pandemic. The author has a keen interest in the current and future trends in the new
normal education. According to Karalis (2020), what is worth studying after returning to
normality, are the implications that have arisen for the day after, that is, what
adjustments need to be made, the extent of the situation and to define the basic
dimensions of education and learning in formal education systems and organizations
amid educational disruptions.
Wearing of Face Masks and Physical Distancing. Along with the current
spread of COVID-19 pandemic, physical distancing and face masks wearing to public
and private schools are compulsory once classes are resumed or started. Governments
around the world have issued policies and guidelines to implement physical distancing
in order to flatten the pandemic curve (Greenstone & Nigam, 2020; Thunstrom et al.,
2020). In addition, wearing of face masks or even personal protective equipment (PPE)
as a public health intervention would probably intercept the transmission link and
prevent communicable diseases (Huang, 2020). Thus, students, faculty members and
non-teaching staff should be required to wear face masks and maintain physical
distancing with each other when going to schools. In addition, they will be required to
strictly follow hygienic practices, health protocols and other precautionary measures
such as contact tracing, foot baths, sanitation and frequent handwashing. One of the
challenges of schools is to reduce student-teacher ratio which will lead to problems like
lack of classrooms and other physical plants and facilities, lack of teachers and lack of
learning materials. Nonetheless, public health is a concern. Thereby, this recommends
every learning institution to plan such measures and policies on physical distancing and
wearing of face masks.
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FOREIGN LITERATURE:
A number of investigators have assembled a comprehensive agenda of
transformative and innovative research issues for blended learning that have the
potential to enhance effectiveness (Garrison and Kanuka 2004; Picciano 2009).
Generally, research has found that BL results in improvement in student success and
satisfaction, (Dziuban and Moskal 2011; Dziuban et al. 2011; Means et al. 2013) as well
as an improvement in students’ sense of community (Rovai and Jordan 2004) when
compared with face-to-face courses. Those who have been most successful at blended
learning initiatives stress the importance of institutional support for course redesign and
planning (Moskal et al. 2013; Dringus and Seagull 2015; Picciano 2009; Tynan et al.
2015). The evolving research questions found in the literature are long and demanding,
with varied definitions of what constitutes “blended learning,” facilitating the need for
continued and in-depth research on instructional models and support needed to
maximize achievement and success (Dringus and Seagull 2015; Bloemer and Swan
2015).
Educational access. The lack of access to educational technologies and
innovations (sometimes termed the digital divice) continues to be a challenge with
novel educational technologies (Fairlie 2004; Jones et al. 2009). One of the promises of
online technologies is that they can increase access to nontraditional and underserved
students by bringing a host of educational resources and experiences to those who may
have limited access to on-campus only higher education. A 2010 U.S. report shows that
students with low socioeconomic status are less likely to obtain higher levels of
postsecondary education (Aud et al. 2010). However, the increasing availability of
distance education has provided educational opportunities to millions (Lewis and Parsad
2008; Allen et al. 2016). Additionally, an emphasis on open educational resources
(OER) in recent years has resulted in significant cost reductions without diminishing
student performance outcomes (Robinson et al. 2014; Fischer et al. 2015; Hilton et al.
2016). Unfortunately, the benefits of access may not be experienced evenly across
demographic groups. A 2015 study found that Hispanic and Black STEM majors were
significantly less likely to take online courses even when controlling for academic
17
First, the effect sizes are based on the linear hypothesis testing model with the
underlying assumption that the treatment and the error terms are uncorrelated,
indicating that there is nothing else going on in the blending that might compound the
results. Although the blended learning articles (Means et al. 2010) were carefully
vetted, the assumption of independence is tenuous at best so that these meta-analysis
studies must be interpreted with extreme caution.
There is an additional concern with blended learning as well. Blends are not
equivalent because of the manner on which they are configured. For instance, a careful
reading of the sources used in the Means, et al. papers will identify, at minimum, the
following blending techniques: laboratory assessments, online instruction, e-mail, class
web sites, computer laboratories, mapping and scaffolding tools, computer clusters,
interactive presentations and e-mail, handwriting capture, evidence-based practice,
electronic portfolios, learning management systems, and virtual apparatuses. These are
not equivalent ways in which to configure courses, and such nonequivalence constitutes
the confounding we describe.
We argue here that, in actuality, blended learning is a general construct in the
form of a boundary object (Star and Griesemer 1989) rather than a treatment effect in
the statistical sense. That is, an idea or concept that can support a community of
practice, but is weakly defined fostering disagreement in the general group.
Conversely, it is stronger in individual constituencies. For instance, content
disciplines (i.e. education, rhetoric, optics, mathematics, and philosophy) formulate a
more precise definition because of commonly embraced teaching and learning
principles.
Quite simply, the situation is more complicated than that, as Leonard Smith
(2007) says after Tolstoy, “All linear models resemble each other, each non nonlinear
system is unique in its own way” (p. 33). This by no means invalidates these studies,
but effect size associated with blended learning should be interpreted with caution
where the impact is evaluated within a certain learning context.
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RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
This chapter discusses the research methods used in the study. It specifies the
research design, population and sampling procedure, sampling design, research
instrument, data gathering, and data analysis techniques and statistical treatment. This
study is a literature review. Literature-based methodology is an effective tool to provide
description, summary and critical evaluation of the existing literatures as the sources of
information. It can also broadly describe as a systematic way of collecting and
synthesizing previous research (Snyder, 2019).
RESEARCH DESIGN
This study used descriptive, documentary and online survey gathers quantifiable
information that can be used for statistical inference on the target audience through
data analysis. Surveys provide evidence on practice, attitudes, and knowledge. Like all
research, surveys should have clear research questions using the smallest possible
number of high-quality, essential, survey questions that will interest the target
population. These methods were used in order to identify the profile of the respondents
and the parental control strategies being used.
This study is focused on the effects of the “new normal” on the education of the
Philippine Christian University students. The respondents are consisting of 30 students
of Philippine Christian University.
SAMPLING DESIGN
by the researcher to draw out primary source of data. The survey questionnaire is
divided into three parts. The first part is a multiple-choice type of question. It refers to
the profile of the students in terms of (a) age and gender of the student; (b) grade-
level; and (c) time spent online. The second part is a 5-point Likert scale question. It
refers to the frequency of the effects of the “new normal” on education of the students
in Philippine Christian University. The third and last part is an open-ended type of
question to measure the level of the Effects of the “New Normal” in Philippine Christian
University students.
RESEARCH INSTRUMENT
The researchers will be using a survey questionnaire that will be held in google
forms and messenger to be able to easily be accessed by the respondents. The
questionnaire is made of checklist format to fully utilize the materials and gather the
perspective of the respondents’ strategies towards to the exposure of their children in
social media.
DATA GATHERING
After the survey is completed, the researchers start to analyze the data collected.
The researchers began to tally and validate the result. The interpretation of the result
will be processed in the treatment of data and will be in tabular form and treated
statistically.
21
Other information was obtained from websites. The researchers make sure that
all the sources of the information they got are all reliable and accurate.
To present, analyze, and interpret data gathered from the respondents, the
researchers may utilize the percentage and weighted mean.
Wherein:
P = Percentage
f = Frequency or number of the respondent
Formula:
Fx
WA=∑
N
Wherein:
WA = Weighted Average
Fx = Total Frequency
22
N = Number of Correspondents
Scale. This can be used as basis for each interpretation of the total tallied answers in
the survey. Interpretations of the stated variable were interpreted using the table
that follows.
The table shows the interpretation used for the perception of Philippine Christian
University students in the “new normal” education. In ranking, 1 will be the symbol for
the lowest computed average and 5 is for the highest. This will serve as guide for the
researchers to generalize the ideas.
Figure 3. Gender
Figure 4. Age
24
Figure 6. Estimated number of hours you spend per week using a computer,
laptop, or cellphone for educational purposes
25
Figure 7. Estimated number of hours you spend per week online (for
example, exploring the Internet)
Table 2
Standard
Mea
Parental Control Strategies Deviatio Verbal Interpretation
n
n
1. I am able to easily access the Agree
4.00 3.61
Internet as needed for my studies.
2. I am comfortable communicating Neutral
3.37 3.06
electronically.
3. I am willing to actively
communicate with my classmates 3.23 2.86 Neutral
and instructors electronically.
4. I feel that my background and
experience will be beneficial to my 3.50 3.14 Neutral
studies.
5. I am comfortable with written Neutral
3.77 3.39
communication.
6. I believe looking back on what I
have learned in a course will help 3.77 3.35
me to remember it better. Neutral
7. In my studies, I am self-disciplined
and find it easy to set aside 3.40 3.03
reading and homework time. Neutral
8. I am able to manage my study
time effectively and easily 3.40 3.03
complete assignments on time. Neutral
9. As a student, I enjoy working
3.33 3.02
independently. Neutral
10. As a student, I enjoy working with
3.20 2.86
other students in groups. Neutral
11. I like a lot of interaction with my
instructors and/or teaching 3.20 2.83
assistants. Neutral
12. I possess sufficient computer
keyboarding skills for doing online 3.57 3.17
work. Neutral
13. I feel comfortable composing text
on a computer in an online 3.50 3.13
learning environment. Neutral
14. I feel comfortable communicating
3.37 2.99
online in English. Neutral
15. I can ask my teacher questions 3.90 3.49 Neutral
and receive a quick response
during Internet
27
Table 3
The respondent’s comments and concerns about the “new normal”
Response Category
1. IT IS SO HARD. Concern
Table 3 shows the comments and concerns of the respondents about the “new
normal” in education. Most of the respondents said that learning online is very hard.
“This online class is more difficult than having face to face class because first not all
29
students have a stable internet connection to do school activities and even internet
connection is one of the reasons why most of the students experiencing difficulties in
attending in online class.”.
SUMMARY
As we enter the COVID-19 recovery phase, it will be critical to reflect on the role
of educational systems – and particularly vocational education – in fostering resilient
societies. The global health crisis and the lockdown that followed have brought to the
fore professions that have often been taken for granted, renewing our awareness of
their value to society. This has helped restore a sense of esteem for those workers who
have worked relentlessly during this time to keep economies afloat.
The outlook is very uncertain. But, if anything, the pandemic has exposed our
vulnerability to crises and revealed how precarious and interdependent the economies
we have built can be. Disruptions on the scale we have just witnessed are not limited to
pandemics, but may also result from natural, political, economic and environmental
disorder. Our capacity to react effectively and efficiently in the future will hinge on
governments’ foresight, readiness and preparedness. Through their role in developing
the competencies and skills needed for tomorrow’s society, education systems will need
to be at the heart of this planning. This includes rethinking how the economy should
evolve to guard against adversity, and defining the skills, education and training
required to support it. This also means working in close collaboration with other
government sectors and the private sector to increase the attractiveness and labor-
market prospects of certain professions, including those considered paramount for the
common good.
Real change often takes place in deep crises, and this moment holds the
possibility that we won’t return to the status quo when things return to “normal”. While
this crisis has deeply disruptive implications, including for education, it does not have
predetermined outcomes. It will be the nature of our collective and systemic responses
to these disruptions that will determine how we are affected by them.
30
In this sense, the pandemic is also a call to renew the commitment to the
Sustainable Development Goals. Ensuring that all young people have the opportunity to
succeed at school and develop the knowledge, skills, attitudes and values that will allow
them to contribute to society is at the heart of the global agenda and education’s
promise to our future society. The current crisis has tested our ability to deal with large-
scale disruptions. It is now up to us to build as its legacy a more resilient society.
CONCLUSION
The education sector is one of the highly affected by the COVID19 pandemic. In
the Philippines, where there’s still a growing COVID-19 infection as of now, this
research presented some of the new normal situation in the school setting. However,
there were some posed challenges and issues presented while recommending several
approaches on the new normal. Schools at all levels, therefore, need to address these
concerns and carefully evaluate plans and procedures on the implementation of the
new normal. Collaboration is the most important at these difficult times. We should help
form the post COVID-19 education, stepping to the new normal. Therefore, I,
recommend that the opportunity and challenges presented should be grasped and
taken a serious concern. The challenge herewith is on how to provide and deliver
quality education amidst exceptional times, like the COVID-19 pandemic, and on what
extent are we going to become prepared when another crisis comes in the future.
RECOMMENDATION
Future studies are recommended such as planning and implementation strategy,
assessing online learning systems to schools, a survey on online platforms, project
proposals and capstone projects, program creation, community assessment, revision of
curricula, development of instructional materials and many more. It has become clear in
the 21st century that online education is entering mainstream and becoming a growing
market as it continues to expand access to learning for more people. Therefore, online
instructors and students need to synthesize information across subjects to critically
weigh significantly different perspectives and incorporate various inquiries.
31
APPENDICES
Dear Respondents,
May we request for a few minutes of your time in answering the survey
questionnaire for a study entitled: “The ‘New Normal’ – Effects on the Education
of PCU Students”.
Sincerely Yours,
Student-researchers:
Donor, Ma. Joanna B.
Macalalad, Pamela Mae C.
33
Instructions: For each of the statements below, please place an X in the box that best describes
yourself or you and your opinion concerning online learning/distance education.
Female Male
1. Gender
18-20 21-23 24-26 27 or more
2. Age
1st year 2nd year 3rd year 4th year
3. Year Level
Less than 1 1-5 hour/s 6-10 hours More than 10
4. Estimated
hour hours
number of
hours you
spend per
week using a
computer,
laptop or
cellphone for
educational
purposes
Strongly Strongly
STATEMENT Agree Neutral Disagree
Agree Disagree
Instructions: Rank the following based on relatability and personal experience.
I am able to easily access the Internet as
needed for my studies.
I am comfortable communicating
electronically.
I am willing to actively communicate with
my classmates and instructors electronically.
I feel that my background and experience
will be beneficial to my studies.
I am comfortable with written
communication.
I believe looking back on what I have
learned in a course will help me to
remember it better.
In my studies, I am self-disciplined and find
it easy to set aside reading and homework
time.
I am able to manage my study time
effectively and easily complete assignments
on time.
As a student, I enjoy working independently.
As a student, I enjoy working with other
students in groups.
I like a lot of interaction with my instructors
and/or teaching assistants.
I possess sufficient computer keyboarding
skills for doing online work.
I feel comfortable composing text on a
computer in an online learning environment.
I feel comfortable communicating online in
English.
I can ask my teacher questions and receive
a quick response during Internet activities
outside of class.
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Is there anything else you would like to add about online learning?
DEDICATION
This research is dedicated to our respective families who have been the source
of the motivation to start this research. They have given the researchers a lot of
determination in doing this research without their unending support this research would
not be done. Also, to our friends who lend their time and collaborative suggestions to
contribute in finishing this paper.
36
The researchers also dedicate this to the School of Business Department Head
and Professors who never failed to teach and guide us despite the new normal in
education.
And most of all, to the students of Philippine Christian University – Manila who
allow the researchers to conduct this research.
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Task Force.
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