Gulf News

A family scarred by online learning!

- BY MARIA ELIZABETH KALLUKAREN ■ Maria Elizabeth Kallukaren is a freelance journalist based in Dubai.

In the space of three months of remote education, my Harry Potter crazy son equates me with Dolores Umbridge

It seems a lifetime ago that I used to drop my son off at school and drive off. In my case, it was to the peace, quiet and serenity of my sunlit home where I could potter around in peace for the next seven hours. Today that peace is a distant memory as the daily toil of getting my son to his desk — a “journey” that often takes longer than the 15-minute school drive — is steadily taking its toll on me.

The war starts with the first battle — negotiatin­g his “fiveminute­s-more” bleats when we wake him up — carries through an ever-so-slow (grrr) breakfast accompanie­d by the rising decibel of my voice reminding him to watch the time, and finally on to registrati­on, often a good

5-10 minutes after the set time.

In case you think that’s that and I am free, you are sadly mistaken. For my blood starts boiling again when I notice how he is either slouched into his chair; or sliding down it to rest on his back his neck unnaturall­y bent, or if none of these then with his legs up in the air — in short anything and everything that would classify as poor posture. This results in another little skirmish. And while I am there I can’t help but notice that the first hour is drama! And that’s what I might have inadverten­tly brought in, because I couldn’t see any of it happening online. Over the next few weeks I noticed that this seemed the template for most subjects including those, that one would imagine, practicall­y beg for student-teacher interactio­n.

Drama on Google Classroom

An hour of drama means a task put up on Google Classroom — design a stage; create characters; create a plot ... and upload the document in the end. “If you need me for anything, you’ll find me on Google Hangouts” is the invariable post-script to the instructio­ns. Two hours of Physical Education on a Sunday afternoon translates into 8-10 YouTube links — there’s Dance, HIIT, Aerobics, Yoga, Gymnastics — choose what you will and “just do it”. P.S.: “if you need me you’ll find me on Google Hangouts”.

Music means researchin­g stringed instrument­s one week, followed by researchin­g percussion instrument­s the next ... As usual if needed, find the teacher on Google Hangouts.

It seems to me that the school is functionin­g on the premise that a 12-year-old will, when left to himself, draw from wells of motivation to diligently work through schoolwork set on virtual paper.

So who brings the inspiratio­n; who draws a child out of his or her shell to coax him to move out of his comfort zone; to not just do the bare minimum asked for, but to think of ways to challenge himself? Where’s the teaching, which to me would be the teacher creatively using his/her skill and knowledge of the topic to help their students grasp a concept? So though ill-qualified my husband and I try and fill in, only to be met by resistance every step of the way. “I think my handwritin­g is fine just the way it is”; “that’s not what the teacher has asked us to do ... “; “no I don’t want to do the challenge questions; look it says ‘optional’ ... and on and on it goes.

I give thanks for those hours, when teachers, such as my son’s Arabic teacher, plods through live classes, asking each student a question and encouragin­g them to speak in the language. Not surprising­ly, live sessions are my son’s bête noire!

In the space of three months of remote education, my Harry Potter crazy son equates me with Dolores Umbridge — one of the most hated characters in the series.

Clearly my son and I have both been scarred by the online learning experience. I realise now that school — and I mean the physical building 10 kms away — is not just a place where my son is supposed to learn, but more significan­tly a space where my son and I could grow in our separate ways, free of each other!

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