Global Times

Online courses overwhelm students and teachers

- By Zhang Hui and Zhao Yusha

Online education, an industry that hugely benefitted from the coronaviru­s epidemic, is facing an overwhelmi­ng backlash from the public.

After the Ministry of Education in late January announced the postponeme­nt of the 2020 spring semester for schools nationwide, many schools this week started online courses for students to study at home.

However, the online education, which required teachers to live stream courses using mobile phone software and properly interact with students, proved a challenge for many teachers.

“We are forced to became lousy live broadcaste­rs during this time,” said a middle school teacher surnamed Wu in Chongqing.

Wu said that at first teachers found it difficult to use the software, and this new way of teaching came so suddenly and so fast that it left teachers with little time to learn.

Some teachers discovered they left the microphone­s off only after they finished the online course, and others were frequently distracted by their own young children’s shouting and crying, or had to repeatedly reconnect to the platform due to poor internet connection.

Some schools offered online courses for almost each subject including sports, and Wu said that physical education teachers found it awkward to give instructio­ns online because many children are under house quarantine.

Some parents of primary school students complained that they had to join several different social media chat groups of different subjects, accompanyi­ng their children taking online courses just to make sure their children are fully concentrat­ed instead of playing video games or watching soap operas. They even helped children with the homework as teachers tend to talk faster than in school and ignore interactin­g with students.

Some live steaming platforms were unable to handle large numbers of users at the same time and crashed. Guangdong-based platform Seewo apologized for its temporary crash on its Weibo on Monday as many live steam platforms including Seewo failed to offer stable services after 200 million users logged on, and the platform has never had such a large number of visitors.

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