Digital resilience in wartime education: the role of online platforms in sustaining english language learning
Author
Nykyporets, S. S.
Kot, S. O.
Piddubchak, S. Y.
Никипорець, С. С.
Кот, С. О.
Піддубчак, С. Ю.
Date
2025Metadata
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Abstract
This study addresses a clear problem: wartime disruption in Ukraine forces English language instruction for engineering students to operate under power cuts, connectivity loss, displacement, and elevated cognitive stress, so digital resilience becomes a core educational capacity rather than a bonus. We examine how specific platform configurations and teaching routines sustain continuity, equity, and assessment integrity in this context. Using a mixed-methods design, we link LMS analytics, videoconference metadata, gradebooks, short student and instructor surveys, and reflection notes collected across 2022-2025. We operationalize outcomes through four indices: continuity index, engagement stability, outcome robustness, and equity gap. Quasi-experimental contrasts compare blackout-heavy weeks with more stable weeks, and interrupted time series capture the effect of interventions such as offline-first content bundles, compressed audio with transcripts, and tri-channel mirroring. Redundancy and offline-first design are associated with higher continuity and lower volatility in attendance and submissions, particularly during clustered outage windows. Assessment flexibility that combines versioned tasks, rubric-linked feedback, and brief oral verification preserves integrity without grade inflation and stabilises criterion-level scores. Short, predictable check-ins and rotating micro-orals sustain engagement more effectively than long live lectures under air-raid alerts and curfews. Device-light alternatives, 72-hour submission windows, and cautious data practices narrow equity gaps for phone-reliant, displaced, or sheltering students while respecting safety constraints. We conclude with a practical wartime playbook for technical universities that institutionalises redundancy, offline-first access, assessment flexibility, and privacy-by-design, and we outline a forward research agenda on causal effects under real outage telemetry, long-term retention, and ethical AI scaffolding for ESP tasks.
URI:
https://ir.lib.vntu.edu.ua//handle/123456789/50141

