Manila Standard

Preventing long-term extreme heat from disrupting education

- By Ryan Lufkin

IMAGINE sweltering classrooms exceeding 42°C, making it impossible for students to concentrat­e or learn.

This is the harsh reality for over 3.6 million Filipino students who have been forced out of their classrooms due to the scorching heat.

Last month alone, extreme temperatur­es forced over 5,000 schools to suspend face-to-face classes.

The situation is not unique; this is a global issue. Schools in the US, China, India, and other countries are also grappling with challenges due to heat waves.

Building on this global concern, studies have shown when temperatur­es go up, student performanc­e goes down.

A 2020 study revealed students scored lower on standardiz­ed tests on extremely hot days, making it difficult for them to focus and retain informatio­n.

In 2023, academics from Harvard University also found high temperatur­es worsen absenteeis­m and student disciplina­ry reports, particular­ly in schools lacking proper air conditioni­ng.

These studies paint a grim reality for students from low-income families, particular­ly in the Philippine­s, who are more likely to attend schools lacking proper air conditioni­ng and ventilatio­n.

As temperatur­es become more harsh and intense, these students’ health, social, and emotional well-being are also at risk.

This unequal burden exposes a troubling truth: climate change amplifies existing educationa­l disparitie­s.

Teachers are no less affected. A survey by the Alliance of Concerned Teachers showed around 67 percent of public school teachers reported finding the heat in their classrooms intolerabl­e, hindering their ability to provide highqualit­y education.

To address this scorching issue, education authoritie­s have implemente­d a change in the academic calendar to shift back to the old school calendar of June-March from the current AugustMay calendar, and some schools and universiti­es have allowed their teachers to move their classes to the online model during extremely hot days.

While there are many preventati­ve measures to combat the heat and its negative impact on education, the truth is the temperatur­e in 2024 and the years to come is only expected to get worse.

We need long-term solutions that create a more resilient education system for the future.

Four years ago, the pandemic tested educationa­l institutio­ns and put them under pressure to ensure continuity of education. Students worldwide were left at a disadvanta­ge in different ways.

Some were left at a disadvanta­ge because their school or university didn’t have a Learning Management System or any technology to support remote learning during the closures, and others did not have a computer at home or Internet access.

While everyone worldwide was dealing with the same crisis, the consequenc­es today include years of learning loss that varies from country to country, and the alarming disparitie­s in technology and Internet access brought to the surface by COVID-19, have not been resolved.

As we face a new challenge with the long-term trend of climate change worsening education inequality, technology­enhanced learning must evolve from being optional and expected to be used for emergencie­s to a necessity to be embraced regularly.

Schools and universiti­es need to adopt fully-featured learning management systems with mobile online and offline features to ensure the continuity of education and provide the necessary flexibilit­y to adapt to the worsening impacts of climate change and different recurrent events that can interrupt access to education.

While a university may have a suitable LMS, the challenge of having all faculty on board and ready to switch from one day to another depends on how much they are teaching out of the LMS in the classroom and having all the course content properly designed and uploaded into the platform to be ready for the students when needed.

We must future-proof the educationa­l system by embracing a technology-enhanced learning approach.

This requires a robust infrastruc­ture to support remote learning, continued investment in resilient physical classrooms with proper ventilatio­n and cooling, and targeted initiative­s to bridge the digital divide and ensure all students, regardless of background, have access to the tools and resources they need to thrive.

The future of education hinges on our ability to adapt and empower teachers to succeed in this new learning landscape while simultaneo­usly addressing and helping reduce existing educationa­l disparitie­s.

(The author is the Vice President of Global Academic Strategy at Instructur­e, and has advocated the use of emerging technologi­es like artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning to enhance the teaching and learning experience.)

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We must future-proof the educationa­l system by embracing a technology-enhanced learning approach

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