Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic compelled higher education to resort to e-learning, posing new challenges to the teaching/learning of pharmacy students worldwide. While digital learning provided flexibility, diverse technological infrastructure and institutional availability of resources greatly influenced the student experience. This scoping review aims to assess the perceptions relating to the pivot to e-learning among pharmacy students in the League of Arab States due to the COVID-19 pandemic and how the shift affected student engagement, learning outcomes, and institutional preparedness. Following PRISMA-ScR guidelines, a comprehensive search across ten databases was conducted to identify relevant studies published between January 2020 and December 2025. Forty studies satisfied the inclusion criteria. Pharmacy students in this region responded to the transition to e-learning in diverse ways. While most appreciated the convenience of online modalities, several challenges were consistently enumerated. These were limited technological infrastructure, reduced interpersonal interaction, and disruption of hands-on practical training. Blended learning approaches were largely favored, particularly for their ability to marry online theoretical instruction with face-to-face experiential learning. Reliability and validity issues of internet-based tests were felt by both faculty and students. Stress and mental health problems among students surfaced. Student complaints in general depicted pharmacy education's need for pedagogic reform, better infrastructure, and student mental health services during e-learning. Areas identified from this review are instructional technology infrastructure improvement, adopting a blended learning strategy, and the need to consider the mental health of students learning at a distance.