“…However, as it became increasingly clear that nearly 80% of the largest colleges and universities would continue with some form of remote instruction for the 2020-2021 academic year (N. , several scholars started urging for research on how marketing education was going to be impacted by the conditions of this new normal (Mitchell et al, 2020;Wooldridge et al, 2021). In response to such calls for research, there has been a flurry of work attempting to gauge the efficacy of different pedagogical interventions such as online discussion boards, messaging apps, podcasts, online peer grading, and video-conference platforms (Ackerman & Gross, 2021;Drehmer & Gala, 2021;McCarthy et al, 2021;Mitchell et al, 2021;Sutton-Brady 2021;Vander Schee & Birrittella, 2021). Such research attempts, coupled with some others (e.g., Kordrostami & Seitz, 2021;Rayburn et al, 2020;Rippé et al, 2021;Swanson et al, 2021), have yielded invaluable insights on improving engagement, perceived control, course material retention, perceived learning, and satisfaction for students, thereby increasing their likelihood of having a positive educational experience despite the pandemic.…”