Academic moralization, which has been internalized through educational institutions with teacher supervision at schools, now falls into a decline in line with the implementation of distance education due to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. This article aims to show that an educational system that does not offer in-person teaching leads to students ignoring the values of academic morality, such as plagiarism, discipline, and responsibility. This article employs a qualitative descriptive method by relying on online news mapping data as a secondary source and verified data from interviews with elementary school students as the primary source. The results of this study indicate that online education as a learning solution during the pandemic has caused students to plagiarize, cheat, rely on others to complete their tasks, and lose an overall sense of discipline and responsibility. This study suggests a new direction of moral education that does not only rely on teacher supervision but rather builds the wisdom of students' independence upon learning.
CITATION STYLE
Muassomah, M., Abdullah, I., Hasanah, U., Dalmeri, D., Sihombing, A. A., & Rodrigo, L. (2022). The Academic Demoralization of Students in Online Learning During the COVID-19 Pandemic. Frontiers in Education, 7. https://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2022.888393
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