Affiliation:
1. University of Nevada, Reno
2. Utah State University
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic changed how short-term relationship
and marriage education (RME) reached participants for events such as the Utah Marriage
Celebration Conference. This article examines participant-perceived relationship
knowledge from an annual marriage conference that began prior to the pandemic and has
continued through the disruption (from 2015 through 2022). Results indicate this
short-duration marriage conference does improve participant-perceived knowledge across
years [t(2381) = 59.84, p = .001]. Further, results indicate that online participants
rate their perceived relationship knowledge as higher than in-person participants at
both pre [F(1, 2752) = 153.0, p = .001] and post [F(7, 2594) = 25.14, p = .001]. Results
also indicate differences in perceived knowledge by participant age, replicating
previous results from this specific program. While participants may desire the ease and
convenience of online learning, results suggest that a mixed modality yields the best
learning outcomes for participants. Suggestions and recommendations for future
short-term RME are provided as it continues to be necessary to navigate post-pandemic
educational environments.
Publisher
Mississippi State University Libraries - DIGITAL COMMONS JOURNALS