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Resumen de Lessons learnt during COVID‑19: making sense of Australian and Swedish university lecturers’ experience

Kristina Turner, Siobhan O’Brien, Helena Wallström, Katarina Samuelsson, Sirkka‑Liisa Marjatta Uusimäki

  • This article reports on a study analysing changes in the use of digital technologies and working from home during the COVID-19 crisis and the impact of these changes on the wellbeing of fve female university lecturers from Australia and Sweden. Applying collaborative autoethnographical methods, this study employed Weick’s sensemaking framework to explore how the academics made sense of these sudden changes. The Positive emotion, Engagement, Relationships, Meaning, and Accomplishment (PERMA) wellbeing framework was also employed to explore the efect of these changes on the academics’ wellbeing. Findings from the refective narratives show that after the initial experiences of stress, each university lecturer was able to adapt and navigate the online teaching environment during the pandemic. However, the time constraints in preparing and adapting to online teaching, and working from home, were experienced by some of the university lecturers as highly stressful and isolating which impacted their sense of wellbeing. Even so, working from home was recognized as a positive experience, providing time for research, hobbies, and time with family. This study addresses a gap in current knowledge by examining the impact of the sudden transi‑ tion to online teaching and learning had on academic wellbeing as conceptualised through the PERMA framework. In addition, by applying Weick’s sensemaking frame‑ work, this study provides a unique perspective around how academics made sense of the sudden switch to online teaching and learning during COVID-19


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