Gulf News

Design: Post-pandemic education

The Covid-19 crisis upended teaching models. How will education facilities adapt?

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Pallavi Dean, founder and creative director of Roar, recently published a report pegging the pandemic as an opportunit­y to rethink the design of educationa­l spaces.

“Home learning has really made us think about the physical spaces in a school where the magic happens, both in terms of educationa­l attainment and personal enrichment,” says Dean. “We need to create more of these spaces — and not waste precious real estate on spaces for humdrum tasks.”

Roar’s white paper, ‘7 Perspectiv­es: How Covid-19 Will Transform the Design of Education Spaces’ features feedback from 135 education profession­als, as well as psychologi­sts and designers.

LONG-TERM DESIGN SOLUTIONS

Long-term changes in the design of education spaces with be driven by long-term changes in teaching — particular­ly the shift to blended learning. Eighty-seven per cent of respondent­s agreed that: ‘Blended learning — a mix of physical and digital — is here to stay.’

The main victim of this may be the traditiona­l classroom: 71 per cent agreed that the ‘flipped classroom’ is an idea whose time has come. The flipped classroom is a model of blended learning. It argues that for simple ‘transmissi­on of informatio­n’, students are better off watching course videos at home.

A big winner from this shift will be WeWork-style co-working spaces, such as solo deep work pods, one-on-one meeting spaces, breakout spaces for group work, and cafestyle social spaces.

Science labs, sports halls, maker spacers, drama theatres and playground­s will also benefit. These spaces have been much missed during home schooling, reinforcin­g the immense value they deliver for students. As one contributo­r noted: “We can teach history and theory over Zoom — but we can’t dissect mice or build drones.”

Dean noted: “We were surprised how much enthusiasm there was for an overhaul of education design. To be honest, we thought many teachers in particular would be dismissive of ‘trendy’ ideas such as the WeWork-ification of schools. But they were the most enthusiast­ic.”

SHORT-TERM DESIGN SOLUTIONS

The top priority in the short-term is to reduce the ‘density’ of children in each space, for example by reducing the number of students in a classroom.

To achieve this, some schools have already begun re-purposing sports halls, canteens and corridors into makeshift learning spaces.

Other solutions include graphics on the floor and walls to reinforce behaviour; touchless toilets; anti-microbial materials for desks and door handles; hospital grade [HEPA] air filters; and medical isolation rooms for children and staff showing symptoms of the coronaviru­s.

“The sooner we can design Covid-proof schools, the sooner we can get children back in schools, and in greater numbers” said Dean.

The white paper highlights two other important issues. The first is the mental well-being of children and staff. “We don’t want a bunch of kids with OCD or PTSD,” observed a psychologi­st who contribute­d to the report. The second is a focus on affordable schools, which often have less space per child than premium schools. “We have to make sure it’s not just the middle class and the wealthy that get back to school, but that every child gets back to school,” noted one contributo­r.

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Live in style as Dubai-based interior designer Pratyush Sarup takes us into the world of interior design through this fortnightl­y feature
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 ??  ?? The design solutions will feature co-working spaces, one-on-one meeting spaces, breakout spaces for group work, cafe-style social spaces and graphics on the floor and walls.
The design solutions will feature co-working spaces, one-on-one meeting spaces, breakout spaces for group work, cafe-style social spaces and graphics on the floor and walls.

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