Gulf Business

YouTubers are now teachers

If any e-learning habits built up during Covid-19 become ingrained, schools may be prompted to incorporat­e more YouTube videos into their routines

- Bloomberg

Typically, this time of year is slow for the “Amoeba Sisters”. The YouTube channel makes animated, intricate videos about biology for over half a million subscriber­s, and its audience usually fluctuates with the school year.

“Kids don’t want to learn about mitosis over spring break,” Sarina Peterson, one of the channel’s creators, said.

But there was no spring break this year. Millions of school-age children are stuck at home, which has turned YouTubers into desperatel­y needed entertaine­rs, babysitter­s and — as parents scramble for homeschool­ing content — de facto educators. Viewership for the “Amoeba Sisters” was up almost 70 per cent on the last Monday in March compared with earlier in the month, a period when traffic usually falls. Other channels popular with kids are seeing similar spikes. Daily views of YouTube clips with “home school” in the title more than doubled over the past month, according to the company.

Global pandemic lockdowns are reigniting an old Silicon Valley dream for schools to run on big data and YouTube clips. Shoddy execution, privacy mishaps and reluctant parents kept that renaissanc­e from happening. But now, virtual education is the reality — and e-learning pioneers are eager to seize this moment.

“I’ve reverted to myself 10 years ago,” Sal Khan, head of Khan Academy, an early e-learning hub, told Bloomberg between flurries of video meetings.

Registrati­ons from parents for Khan Academy’s online classes have grown twenty-fold in recent weeks and its YouTube traffic rose 80 per cent. (Bandwidth costs for the nonprofit also shot up.)

Even online personalit­ies not generally devoted to education have dipped a toe in the growing market. Mark Rober, a popular YouTuber known for his “glitter-bombing” clips, has started a regular “Science Class” series during quarantine.

For YouTube, which is part of Alphabet Inc.’s Google, the quarantine is a chance to rehabilita­te its image for parents and teachers. Once blocked in classrooms, the company now has a shot at proving its educationa­l mettle.

In 2018, the company started a fund for ‘EduTubers’ and introduced ‘Learning Playlists’, a curated collection of channels like Khan Academy and “Amoeba Sisters.”

Now, it’s highlighti­ng more of those videos on a website YouTube set up for parents last month, called “Learn@Home.” The company wouldn’t provide traffic numbers for Learn@Home, but Peterson said that this kind of list can provide a big boost in viewership.

Peterson and her sister and collaborat­or, Brianna Rapini, a former biology teacher, are unique among YouTubers — they post videos only once a month, follow science curriculum and sometimes make supplement­al content at teachers’ request. They also work with several schools, but they still see hurdles for getting YouTube widely adopted inside classrooms, even virtual ones.

YouTube isn’t integrated easily with most school software and some districts still block the site, citing concerns over roaming teenage eyes or bandwidth.

If the habits built up during Covid-19 endure, though, schools may be incorporat­ing more YouTube into their routines.

Growing traction for YouTube’s educationa­l playlists may be a start. “They’re definitely not there yet,” Peterson said. “But it’s so exciting.”

 ??  ?? YouTuber Mark Rober has started a regular “Science Class” series during quarantine
YouTuber Mark Rober has started a regular “Science Class” series during quarantine

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