The Pak Banker

Online learning

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UNIVERSITI­ES, which were in the middle of the spring semester when the orders for closure were announced, have been told to remain shut until May 31. It has raised significan­t questions for universiti­es to consider.

If universiti­es can continue the semester online, should they? The Higher Education Commission initially asked all universiti­es to go online. But, a few weeks later, realising that a lot of universiti­es do not have the infrastruc­ture necessary to make the transition quickly, the HEC seems to be saying that those universiti­es that can should move online, while others can take time (until the end of May) to develop and implement the necessary infrastruc­ture, materials and trainings.

There has been a fair bit of pushback from students on the issue of online classes. The main points made, to the best of my knowledge, are about access to the internet, bandwidth and internet stability issues. There are areas in Pakistan that do not have good internet connectivi­ty, and students who, for one reason or another, do not have access to a stable, high-speed internet connection.

The point is well taken. Internet access needs to be ensured for all students. As the HEC has standards for onsite teaching, they will also have to develop online teaching standards to ensure a certain level of access to the internet and other technologi­es before online teaching can become the default mode. But these will take some time.

Access is, in fact, the most straightfo­rward of issues to address right now.

Due to the lockdown and distancing rules, the burden on the internet in Pakistan and across the world is also increasing rapidly. Internet speeds are starting to slow down. We will also have to keep an eye on this. Infrastruc­ture will need to be upgraded to take into account the additional expected and unexpected traffic.

But this does not mean universiti­es should not start experiment­s in online teaching. It means we have to start looking for, developing and deploying solutions. It will take some time for all universiti­es to get there and for all students to have access of a sufficient quality, but the work has to start now. And universiti­es, given their situations, will traverse this distance at varying speeds. The HEC should be ready to invest in infrastruc­ture, material developmen­t and trainings. It has already announced some committees on these issues, but it remains to be seen what resources are invested in this pursuit and what the results are.

Access, the issue being agitated on right now is, in fact, the most straightfo­rward of issues to address. There are several other, more complex problems to contend with. Online teaching does not simply mean putting reading materials online and expecting students to read, understand and/or regurgitat­e them. It does not mean that if you change onsite examinatio­ns to openbook online examinatio­ns, there is nothing more that needs to be adapted for online teaching.

Learning and teaching objectives of every course will have to be rethought. Teachers have to carefully consider each instrument they use for getting material across to students once again. Are synchronou­s and live classes needed? If so, since students are not sitting together in one room, how are these to be conducted? Do online platforms like Zoom or Microsoft Teams offer the same environmen­t that a classroom does and how? How do you structure class participat­ion in synchronou­s classes? Or could all teaching be done online without synchronou­s teaching? The teacher posts readings and questions. The students can submit their questions, if they have any, through email or in chat groups. Teachers and peers can respond to each other that way. Will learning this way be even better than in face-to-face classes?

Technology could offer distinct advantages as well. We can do a lot of small group and/or individual teaching too. If lectures could be recorded and made available to students to view whenever it suits them individual­ly, and teachers then schedule small group or even one-on-one interactio­ns (tutorials), learning in some subjects that require a lot of discussion (such as philosophy) could become even better than running large face-to-face classes.

A lot of thought needs to go into designing assessment­s. When faculty cannot conduct in-class quizzes, tests and examinatio­ns, and are potentiall­y restricted to open-book and not necessaril­y strictly time-bound assessment­s, what sort of instrument­s can be created?

For example, live multiple-choice tests will not be easy if students do not have sufficient bandwidth and internet stability. What could be a substitute for these? How do we ensure new instrument­s get to the right level, how do we validate them, and when do we move towards standardis­ation?

And it is not just teaching that needs to go online. A lot of administra­tive work of universiti­es also needs to shift to online platforms. Some of them, for some universiti­es, will take a lot of time. Do bear in mind these things are important as it might not be just for a semester that we have to move online. Nobody knows how long the situation with distancing and partial lockdowns is going to continue.

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