Pandemic Reshaping Education
corona virus pandemic could reshape education systems
Well before the Pandemic COVID-19, there was already high growth
and adoption of technology in education, with global education technology (
ed tech) investments reaching billions of dollars and the overall market for online education
projected to grow further. Whether it is language apps, virtual tutoring, video
conferencing tools, or online
learning software, there has been a significant
surge in usage since COVID-19.Consider the following points of interest:
1.
The corona virus pandemic
has changed how millions around the globe are educated.
2.
New solutions for education could bring much
needed innovation.
3.
Given the digital divide,
new shifts in education approaches could widen equality gaps.
It has been a matter of
weeks and corona virus (COVID-19) has changed how learners are educated around
the world. These changes could give us a glimpse at how education could change
for the better - and the worse - in the long term. As the pandemic spreads rapidly
in Kenya and around the globe, countries have taken swift and decisive actions
to mitigate the development of a full-blown pandemic. In the past months, there
had been multiple announcements suspending attendance at schools and
universities. As of March 13 going forward, the OECD estimated that over 421 million children were affected due to
school closures announced or implemented in 39 countries. In addition, another
22 countries have since announced partial "localized" closures. As such,
these mitigation decisions have led millions of learners into temporary
‘home-schooling’ situations, especially in some of the most heavily impacted
countries.
These changes have
certainly caused a degree of inconvenience, but they have also prompted new
examples of educational innovation. Although it may be too early to judge how
reactions to COVID-19 will affect education systems around the world, there are
signs suggesting that it could have a lasting impact on the trajectory of
learning innovation and digitization. While some believe that the unplanned and
rapid move to online learning – with no training, insufficient bandwidth,
and little preparation – will result in a poor user experience that is not
conducive to sustained growth, others believe that a new hybrid model of
education will emerge, with significant benefits. Gesci C.E.O. put it right during a teachers’ training forum in
Kenya when he said, “I believe that the integration of information technology
in education will be further accelerated and that E-Learning will eventually
become an integral component of school education”. Below, we follow three
trends that could hint at future transformations:
1. Education -pushed
to change - could lead to surprising innovations
Although the slow pace
of change in academic institutions the world over is annoying, with archaic,
lecture-based approaches to teaching and outmoded classrooms; all is not lost.
Most interestingly, a pandemic by the name COVID-19 has become a catalyst for
educational institutions worldwide to search for innovative solutions in a
relatively short period of time. To help
slow the virus' spread, students in many countries started to learn
from home, via different platforms. For instance, In
China where the pandemic was first reported, 120 million Chinese got access to
learning material through live television broadcasts. This was to be replicated in many other countries as
the virus spread throughout the globe. Others may have used simpler-yet no less
creative-solutions to help the learners who could no longer access physical
classrooms.
In a similar manner,
learners in Kenya began leveraging online learning, although at a lower percentage. However, one school in Nairobi
county was doing it so well even for subjects such as physical education.
Learners shot and sent over their own videos of athletic training and sports to
their teachers as "homework," pushing students to learn new digital skills.
This was integrating of ICT in Education without the classroom .One student’s
parent remarked, “while the sports exercise took a few minutes, my son spent
three hours shooting, editing and sending the video in the right format to his
teacher."Talk of work skills learned for future use! We see learners
truly embracing the ‘learning anywhere, anytime’ concept of digital education
in a range of formats. Traditional in-person classroom learning will be
complemented with new learning modalities - from live broadcasts to
‘educational influencers’ to virtual reality experiences. Learning could become
a habit that is integrated into daily routines - a true lifestyle.
2. Collaborations
between Public-private educational partners could breed new solutions
In the past four months or thereabout, we have
seen learning coalitions taking shape and place, with various and diverse stakeholders - including governments,
publishers, education professionals, technology providers, and telecom network
operators - coming together to utilize digital platforms as a temporary solution
to the crisis. In developing countries especially, where education has
predominantly been provided by the government, this could become a prevalent
and consequential trend to future education. In Kenya for instance, the
Ministry of Education in collaboration
with the KICD has made great steps towards developing a new cloud-based,
online learning and broadcasting platform to be used by all learners from
pre-primary to high school. The resources on these
platforms include videos ,e- books, assessment tools, and counseling services
for free. The intention is to continue using and maintaining these platforms
even after COVID-19 pandemic-if, we ever get there.
Looking at such
examples as these, it is evident that educational innovation is receiving
attention beyond the typical government funding or the Non-Government project
based approaches. In the past years, we have already seen far greater interest,
and investment, coming from the private sector in education solutions and
innovation .For example, Microsoft, Google, Master Card and Samsung just to
name a few corporations that are awakening to the strategic imperative of an
educated populace even for their own business models survival. While most
initiatives to date have been limited in scope, and relatively isolated, the
pandemic could pave the way for much larger-scale, cross-industry collaborations
to be formed around common educational ends.
3. Possible widening
of the digital divide
Many schools are
finding stop-gap solutions to continue teaching during the closure, but the
quality of learning is heavily dependent on the level and quality of digital
access. While virtual classes on personal tablets may be the norm in first
world, for example, many students in less developed economies rely on lessons
and assignments sent via Whats App or email or general broadcast over the
mainstream media .Additionally, the less affluent and digitally savvy learners
and families are, the further such students are left behind. When classes
transition online, these children lose out because of the cost of digital
devices and data plans. Unless access costs decrease and quality of access
increase in all countries, the gap in education quality, and thus socioeconomic
equality will be further exacerbated. The digital divide could become more
extreme if educational access is dictated by access to the latest technologies
that keep emerging every day.
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