Pedagogical Disruption and Lecturer Preparedness During Emergency Online Teaching: Evidence from Sri Lankan Higher Education

Authors

  • Chrishelle Wickramasekara MA,Global Banking School, Bath Spa University Partnership, Birmingham, United Kingdom; and Department of Interdisciplinary Research & Statistics, PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom. https://orcid.org/0009-0003-1240-3691
  • Kennedy Oberhiri Obohwemu PhD,Department of Interdisciplinary Research and Statistics, PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5175-1179
  • Chika Oguguo PhD,Department of Interdisciplinary Research & Statistics, PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
  • Oladipo Vincent Akinmade MPH,Digital Health and Rights Project (Center for Interdisciplinary Methodologies, CIM), University of Warwick, Coventry, United Kingdom; and Department of Interdisciplinary Research & Statistics, PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5053-2716
  • Festus Ituah PhD,School of Health and Sports Science, Regent College, London, United Kingdom; and Department of Interdisciplinary Research & Statistics, PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1292-0678
  • Daniel Obande Haruna MSc,Department of Psychology, St. Mary’s University, London, United Kingdom; and Department of Interdisciplinary Research & Statistics, PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8004-7794
  • Ulunma Ikwuoma Mariere FWACP,Bayelsa Medical University, Nigeria; and Department of Interdisciplinary Research & Statistics, PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1992-9288
  • Kaleka Nuka-Nwikpasi MPH,Faculty of Science, Business and Enterprise, University of Chester, United Kingdom; and Department of Interdisciplinary Research & Statistics, PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom. https://orcid.org/0009-0001-9576-1851
  • Sayma Akter Jannat BBA,Department of Finance, Jagannath University, Dhaka, Bangladesh; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom https://orcid.org/0009-0004-6886-0012
  • Obioma Chidumaga Aririsukwu MBBS,Department of Medicine, St. Francis Medical Center, Abuja, Nigeria; and Department of Interdisciplinary Research & Statistics, PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55640/jsshrf-06-02-02

Keywords:

Emergency remote teaching, lecturer preparedness, online pedagogy, COVID-19

Abstract

The sudden transition to online teaching during the COVID-19 pandemic placed unprecedented demands on university lecturers, particularly within resource-constrained higher education systems. While early scholarship has documented broad challenges associated with emergency remote teaching, less attention has been paid to how lecturers in developing contexts experienced pedagogical disruption and professional strain during this period. This paper examines lecturer preparedness, instructional adaptation, and professional wellbeing during the rapid shift to online teaching in Sri Lankan higher education. Drawing on qualitative evidence from an exploratory study conducted during the pandemic, the paper synthesises lecturer-reported challenges relating to digital competence, instructional design, workload escalation, infrastructure limitations, and emotional pressure. The analysis situates these experiences within wider debates on pedagogical resilience and academic labour under crisis conditions. Rather than framing lecturers as passive recipients of institutional directives, the paper highlights the active but constrained role academics played in sustaining teaching continuity despite limited systemic support. The findings contribute to international discussions on emergency online pedagogy by foregrounding the lived realities of lecturers operating within fragile digital ecosystems. The paper concludes with reflections on what lecturer experiences during COVID-19 reveal about preparedness, support, and professional sustainability in higher education systems facing future disruptions.

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Published

2026-02-07

How to Cite

Chrishelle Wickramasekara, Kennedy Oberhiri Obohwemu, Chika Oguguo, Oladipo Vincent Akinmade, Festus Ituah, Daniel Obande Haruna, Ulunma Ikwuoma Mariere, Kaleka Nuka-Nwikpasi, Sayma Akter Jannat, & Obioma Chidumaga Aririsukwu. (2026). Pedagogical Disruption and Lecturer Preparedness During Emergency Online Teaching: Evidence from Sri Lankan Higher Education. Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities Research Fundamentals, 6(02), 6–13. https://doi.org/10.55640/jsshrf-06-02-02