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British Columbia

B.C. assistant professors worried about faculty, student burnout from online learning

The transition from in-person to online learning is taking a toll on those who work in academia and as the first semester comes to an end, two Simon Fraser University instructors say many faculty members are overworked and overstressed.

'You cannot stay on Zoom for 4 hours'

Assistant professors at Simon Fraser University say while the school does have mental health and technical support available for faculty and students, the move to online learning is still taking its toll. (Shutterstock)

As the first semester of this post-secondary school year comes to anend, some B.C. university instructorssay they are at their witsend when it comes to online teaching.

Hannah McGregorand Pooja Dharamshi, both assistant professors at Simon Fraser University, spoke out Wednesday on CBC's The Early Edition about the challenges they have hadand the burnout they are feeling, after trying to mould young minds via video technology.

The stress began, said McGregor, when faculty was told all fallcourses would have to be taught virtually.

"In a lot of cases, we got three days to figure out how to deliver our courses online and that's normally a whole job," said McGregor, who teaches in the school's publishing program.

Zoom fatigue

Dharamshi, a member of the education department faculty, said it also does not work to simply take a lecture intended for a classroom and try to duplicate it online.

"I have a four hour lecture with my graduate students," said Dharamshi. "You cannot stay on Zoom for four hours ... Zoom fatigue is real."

Psychologists have confirmedthat constant video chat meetings are draining users more than in-person conversations.

The two women also worry about what they say is a lackof connectivity to their studentsand other faculty members.

McGregor said not only do faculty members often rely on each other for in-person support and inspiration, they are also used to getting energy from classrooms of students.

"Having conversations, building ideas together, you know, that's what makes education exciting. That's what makes teaching exciting. And it's not impossible to reproduce online, but it is hard and it's skilled labour and it's work that a lot of us just weren't ready for," she said.

It also makes it hard for the students Dharamashi teaches who she said often work on projects collaboratively but are now scattered across different time zones.

School offering support, resources

In a statement, Simon Fraser University said it recognizes the challenges of the pandemic and has support services available for students and staff, including mental health counselling and resources to help both groups adapt to online learning.

"It's really nice to have those resources. But again, it's something else to do," said Dharamashi who said many faculty members likely don't have time to attend online sessions on how to teach online when they are just too busy trying to keep on top of workloads ormay have scheduling conflicts.

Plus thereis that Zoom fatigue factor.

SFU's statement said faculty deans were recently surveyed about how their faculty has dealt with workloads during the pandemic and is currently going through those responses to identify what best practices are working well and what is not.

To hear the complete interview withHannah McGregorand Pooja Dharamshi on CBC's The Early Edition, tap the audio link below:

With files from The Early Edition