Integrative Biology Journals

JOURNAL OF FORESTRY RESEARCH ›› 2023, Vol. 34 ›› Issue (4): 1175-1194.DOI: 10.1007/s11676-022-01555-5

• Forests And Education • Previous Articles    

Delivering forestry courses online: experiences, lessons learned, and future of forestry online education in the Asia Pacific

Anil Shrestha1, Jodi Crawford1, Hailan Chen2, Shiyi Zhang3, Na Zhong1, Michelle Zeng1, Guangyu Wang1,g   

  1. 1 Asia Forest Research Center, Faculty of Forestry, University of British Columbia, V6T 1Z4, Vancouver, BC, Canada
    2 Center of Teaching, Learning, and Technology, University of British Columbia, V6T 1Z4, Vancouver, BC, Canada
    3 Asia-Pacific Network for Sustainable Forest Management and Rehabilitation, 100102, Beijing, People’s Republic of China
  • Received:2022-07-19 Accepted:2022-09-02 Online:2024-10-16
  • Contact: Guangyu Wang

Abstract:

Innovation in forestry education is needed to address changing contexts of the positionality of forests. This is particularly significant in the Asia–Pacific region, where deforestation and degradation are high. However, the accessibility of high-quality forestry education to address changing regional and global contexts is lacking. A series of innovative sustainable forest management (SFM) open education resource (OER) courses were developed and implemented to improve the accessibility of SFM education to enhance teaching quality, curriculum, and research capacity of universities in the Asia-Pacific Region. To evaluate the SFM-OER program in terms of student experiences, this study investigated student achievement, perceived success of the pedagogical approach and instructional design, and perceived effectiveness of the learning activities in promoting active and transformative learning through the assessment of a 1,191-course feedback survey between 2018 and 2020, including the global pandemic. This study revealed that the program attracted diverse student demographics, including a higher proportion of female students majoring in forestry, ecology, and other environmental studies. Their primary motivation to participate in the courses was to gain international experience, followed by the flexibility of online learning, mandatory course requirements, and earning course credits. Students were satisfied with the Canvas learning management system. Most students spent less than 5 to 10 h of their weekly time in the course and agreed or strongly agreed that the workloads were manageable. Students reflected positively on various learning activities and assignments, such as watching lecture videos, taking quizzes, reading and summarizing, having discussions, and peer review writing. However, they did not clearly prefer specific learning activities, signifying the importance of using diverse learning activities to satisfy diverse individual learning styles in online settings. This analysis contributes to the further development of student-centered pedagogical development for online learning and provides insight into the ways forward for online higher forestry education, while repurposing existing OER courses in a post-Covid-19 era.

Key words: Sustainable Forest Management, Online forestry education, Pedagogy innovation, Covid-19, Lessons learned, Asia Pacific