Academic support under COVID-19 lockdown: what students think of online support e-tools in an ODeL course

Purpose: This paper aims to explore student teachers’ views related to the online academic support e-tools used under the COVID-19 lockdown Design/methodology/approach: Mapping a pragmatic research approach, an explanatory mixed methods design was used for the study Findings: Empirical evidence revealed that student teachers were satisfied and experienced the academic support tools as being positively applied to their online learning Furthermore, it is reported that student teachers preferred the discussion forum as the most appropriate academic support e-tool in the course under coronavirus (COVID-19) lockdown Research limitations/implications: This exploratory pragmatic study extends the knowledge of the online academic support e-tools for an open distance e-learning (ODeL) context that was used under COVID-19 lockdown This study provides additional evidence concerning a revised academic support frame for an ODeL online learning context Research limitations: small sample size was used, and therefore caution must be applied, as the findings might not be transferable to a similar context The current study has only examined a teacher education course and could not be generalised to similar conditions as those under COVID-19 lockdown This exploratory research has raised many questions that require further investigation More research is required to determine the efficacy of the academic support e-tools with regard to student learning in other online courses and contexts Practical implications: The student teachers that participated in this study were empowered to using the academic support e-tools to support them under COVID-19 lockdown The discussion was mostly preferred academic supportive e-tool as an engaged, participatory and communicative platform for accelerated learning in the teaching methodology of economics course Originality/value: A noteworthy contribution was made in the design and testing of the reliability of methodological tools, which could be replicated in blended and ODeL contexts © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited