College students’ perceived teaching presence in emergency remote online mathematics teaching

Authors

  • Isaac Bengre Taley Mampong Technical College of Education, Ghana
    Ghana

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.23917/jramathedu.v7i3.17589

Keywords:

Remote online teaching, Teaching presence, Synchronous interaction

Abstract

In this period of the Covid-19 outbreak, the interest in replacing conventional face-to-face teaching with online teaching in Ghana's Colleges of Education has sown amidst concerns about the presence of teaching. Through an online survey, 452 students from three education colleges responded to the teaching presence scale. This study examined college students' perception of mathematics teaching presence and how gender and the mode of interaction affected students' sense of teaching presence during the emergency remote online teaching of mathematics. The results showed that about 82.7% of the students had a moderate to a high sense of mathematics teaching presence in the emergency remote online teaching. This means that mathematics teachers were unable to identify the mathematics learning needs, neither were teachers able to manage collaborative and reflective work, nor averted undirected discourse among 27.3% of the students. Although the gender of students did not affect the sense of mathematics teaching, the result indicated that in the absence of asynchronous mode of interaction, synchronous and blended modes of interaction positively affected students' perceived mathematics teaching presence. Altogether, this study urges mathematics teachers to employ creative pedagogical approaches that make teaching presence more conspicuous to students in emergency remote online mathematics teaching.

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Submitted

2025-03-22

Published

2022-07-31

How to Cite

Taley, I. B. (2022). College students’ perceived teaching presence in emergency remote online mathematics teaching. JRAMathEdu (Journal of Research and Advances in Mathematics Education), 7(3), 116–129. https://doi.org/10.23917/jramathedu.v7i3.17589

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Section

Articles