Gulf News

Digital platform to cut teacher workload

Teacherly will reduce use of textbooks and whiteboard­s

- BY FAISAL MASUDI Senior Reporter

Dubai schools plan to trial a solution to reduce teacher workload and paperwork by using an online platform for lesson planning, delivery and assessment, Gulf News can reveal.

Working with Dubai Future Foundation, the UAE’s Taaleem education group will pilot the use of the London-based ‘Teacherly’ digital platform in some of its schools to deliver customised lessons online.

The project will reduce the need for text books, printouts of assignment­s and projects, mark sheets, school dairies or whiteboard­s used in brick-and-mortar classrooms.

Public-private partnershi­p

Saeed Al Falasi, executive director at the Dubai Future Foundation, said: “With education being one of the key sectors affected by the rapid changes in technology we at Dubai Future Accelerato­rs (DFA) realise the potential lying in innovative start-ups utilising technology to solve challenges facing this sector. The partnershi­p between the Dubai-based education company Taaleem and Teacherly is a testament to our efforts in connecting startups with government entities and corporates to co-create the future.”

Daily workload

Gavin Walford-Wright, chief human resources officer at Taaleem, told Gulf News that teacher workload is a constant balancing act.

“Assessment, tracking of students’ progress, report writing and collaborat­ive planning meetings — all of these impact the daily workload of teachers. Along with these demands are profession­al developmen­t, after school activities, parent meetings and responding to daily unplanned events that occur because of the ‘human’ element of the job; these all have a huge demand on teachers’ time,” he added.

Although Taaleem schools “are well-resourced and seek expert advice to adopt and adapt tools, strategies and resources that support teachers in their daily work”, the group as a whole is turning to new technology to make teacher workload management even easier, said Walford-Wright.

“Teacherly provides a platform and resource that is hugely beneficial when it comes to teachers’ planning and time management. The aim is to improve learning outcomes and make teaching better for all by [digitally] sharing content, best practices and profession­al developmen­t resources. We believe that providing such a platform and resource will relieve a huge burden from teachers and free up time for other important tasks.”

Norm Dean, chief education

officer at Taaleem, said in the pilot phase Teacherly will be trialled in schools using different curricula frameworks to ensure compatibil­ity and adaptabili­ty before going mainstream.

“The ‘intelligen­t’ adaptive nature of the tool will provide tailored planning options for teachers that will reduce workload, and at the same time provide developmen­tally appropriat­e scaffoldin­g of lessons toward identifiab­le goals and learning standards,” he added.

Atif Mahmoud, Founder and CEO of Teacherly, said the company is working with DFA and Dubai’s Knowledge and Human Developmen­t Authority (KHDA) “to help digitise and centralise the process for disseminat­ion of best practice in schools and to help centralise the distributi­on of lessons in schools by working with a number of schools that showed interest in Teacherly”.

The partnershi­p between Taaleem and Teacherly is a testament to our efforts in connecting startups with government entities and corporates to co-create the future.” Saeed Al Falasi |

Executive director, Dubai Future Foundation

Teacherly provides a platform and resource that is hugely beneficial when it comes to teachers’ planning and time management. The aim is to improve learning outcomes.” Gavin Walford-Wright | Chief human resources officer at Taaleem

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 ?? Courtesy: Taaleem ?? From left: Atif Mahmoud; Gemma Hossain, Teacherly Business Developmen­t Mena Region, and Norm Dean at the signing ceremony at Taaleem’s Central Office.
Courtesy: Taaleem From left: Atif Mahmoud; Gemma Hossain, Teacherly Business Developmen­t Mena Region, and Norm Dean at the signing ceremony at Taaleem’s Central Office.

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