China Daily (Hong Kong)

Online classes can’t replace classrooms

- The author is the deputy director of the 21st Century Education Research Institute. The views don’t necessaril­y represent those of China Daily.

This week should have seen the beginning of a new semester. Instead, China has been witnessing a different kind of new semester because of the novel coronaviru­s outbreak: many Chinese schools have suspended the new semester and moved the classrooms online.

On the first day of school, DingTalk, a virtual workplace developed by Alibaba Group, held online classes for an estimated 50 million students nationwide, from primary to high school level.

The huge demand prompted many to assume that online classrooms are the source of future prosperity. But according to a guideline issued by the Ministry of Education on Feb 12, “postponeme­nt of school without suspension of learning” is not equal to learning through online courses. As the education authoritie­s have said, it is unnecessar­y for every teacher to record online courses to be evaluated for quality. Also, kindergart­en classes cannot be held online.

Therefore, it is still too early to say this is the onset of “spring” for online education.

To prevent the spread of the novel coronaviru­s, schools have postponed the new semester, and after-school training institutes have been closed. This has made online education an indispensa­ble medium for students to take lessons, leading to an explosion of viewings on online educationa­l platforms.

Yet online classes can never replace real classes. Whether online education would continue its explosive growth even after the epidemic is contained would depend on the quality of courses it offers. If user experience is poor, the rapidly growing traffic on online education platforms will contract in the near future, bringing little profit for the online education companies.

In fact, despite the huge flow of capital into online education platforms, merely 5 percent of the platforms are making a profit. Although online education platforms have taken up the grand mission to replace the traditiona­l teaching mode, they exhibit little superiorit­y over the traditiona­l education institutio­ns except that they can overcome the time and space limitation.

More suitable to impart knowledge and skill because of their unfettered access to resources and students, online courses have been found wanting when it comes to educating students in aspects such as morality, social responsibi­lities and physical exercise, which play a big role in the developmen­t of a person. Besides, because of poor interactio­n, knowledge teaching may be compromise­d online. Also, complaints by students, teachers, parents have exposed the weaknesses of online education. For example, paying little attention to the online teachers, many students have been reported to be busy chatting or posting messages online. And a class of 60 students is said to have clicked hundreds of thousands of likes for their teacher during a single livestream­ing lesson.

Moreover, parents are under pressure to fully cooperate with the online teachers as they have to monitor and tutor their children at home to ensure they are not distracted while attending online classes.

It is also harmful to urge teachers who are not qualified to do so to start live-streaming. The poor quality of education they impart may have the opposite effect on the students, which may affect the students’ developmen­t in the long run. Such problems also exist in some traditiona­l educationa­l institutio­ns which have hastily switched to online platforms to cut costs, without paying attention to quality.

The epidemic, however, may accelerate the demise of some offline institutio­ns whose performanc­e has been poor. But that does not mean online platforms are having an easy time, because most of them are offering free lessons to compete with rivals and attract more students. And although the epidemic may have prompted more subscriber­s to join online education platforms, it would be far-fetched to assume that online education institutio­ns are making big money.

Basically, it is content rather than the form of education that plays a decisive role in the education sector’s competitio­n. So, poor quality online education platforms are likely to have a short life despite the increase in traffic due to the epidemic.

 ?? CAI MENG / CHINA DAILY ??
CAI MENG / CHINA DAILY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China