Creativity in a COVID-19 Virtual Learning Space

Authors

  • Kathy O’Flynn-Magee University of British Columbia Author
  • Elizabeth J. Straus University of British Columbia Author
  • Aneet Dhaliwal University of British Columbia Author
  • Samantha-Ruth Chande University of British Columbia Author
  • Batool Alreffi University of British Columbia Author
  • Prabhjot Randhawa University of British Columbia Author
  • Yenlinh Chung University of British Columbia Author
  • Salwa Khader University of British Columbia Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17483/2368-6669.1284

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has changed the world, and education too has been affected in many ways. In particular, much learning in higher education has moved to synchronous virtual spaces. Regardless of context, the principles of learning and teaching remain at the foreground, and the importance of developing active and creative learning spaces has never been greater. We are a group of one faculty member, six graduate students, and one teaching assistant who came together to write this paper so that we could share our online experiences in a clinical education course during the summer of 2020. We used a variety of active-learning and creative-teaching approaches. In this paper, we share our virtual use of video-based learning, gaming/crosswords, speed dating, blowing bubbles as a way to learn how to teach a psychomotor skill, image-based art, forum theatre, and found poetry. We share a crossword designed specifically for readers with which to grapple and our summary is presented as a found poem. Student author quotes are interspersed throughout the paper.

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Published

April 15, 2021

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Article

How to Cite

Creativity in a COVID-19 Virtual Learning Space. (2021). Quality Advancement in Nursing Education - Avancées En Formation infirmière, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.17483/2368-6669.1284