Abstract:
In 2020, COVID-19 crisis forced learning organisations, Lesotho universities included, to
suspend their face-to-face teaching and migrate their learning activities online. This was a new
way of learning to many students. The study reported in this paper investigated the challenges
students in one Lesotho university were experiencing with online learning. Specifically, the
study focused on the types of challenges the students were experiencing, (2) how the students
dealt with these challenges and (3) the general implications. The study employed a qualitative
approach in which telephone semi-structured interviews were used to collect data from 12
undergraduate students in the Faculty of Education. The findings of this study suggest that the
challenges that were experienced by the students were mainly influenced by their personal
attributes, pedagogical issues and how the university supported them. The study concludes that
the conditions under which online learning was offered in this university were not conducive
to enhance effective student participation online; the students were not receiving quality
learning; and others were even excluded from learning by the existing digital conditions. The
study recommends that the University should invest more in the digital infrastructure, processes
and techniques that would enhance students’ experiences with online learning. The University
should also find ways of assisting students with access to digital devices and making internet
easily accessible to these students.