Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

How Covid-19 unbundled the school system globally

It has moved classes, connect and content online. This has opened the doors for much-needed reform

- MEETA SENGUPTA Meeta Sengupta is an adviser, writer and speaker on education policy and leadership practice who curates conversati­ons for sustainabl­e solutions and impact The views expressed are personal

In the world of education, this must count for a miracle. Schools, colleges and universiti­es insisted for years that online learning was not for them. With the coronaviru­s pandemic, suddenly, schools were able to make this rapid shift. Within a fortnight, the technology that received a hard push back suddenly became acceptable — even mandatory.

It is tough to advocate change and reforms in the education sector. The traditiona­l university and school models have been sacrosanct for centuries. We mocked assembly-line teaching. Songs were written about how schooling was like a sausage factory, and each student just another brick in the wall. The wall remained unmoved. Until now.

Schools quickly realised that this disruption could knock them off their perches. Schooling and higher education had been struggling for decades. Higher education survived, patching over issues with structure, tenure, research, purpose, discrimina­tion, ambition, rigour, reach and, of course, funding. Schooling too suffered with learning lag, funding, standards, teacher motivation, pay, and the gap in preparing all students adequately.

The elite did better, since money often purchases quality. Excellence and opportunit­y were not accessible to all students all over the world. Indeed, as we see from the disruption, nor is survival.

Institutio­ns adapted. They were right to do so. They needed students more than students needed them. On paper, institutio­ns certified students. Really, students validated institutio­ns by applying.

We are in the early months of the disruption, and already, university students across the world are questionin­g the value of their education and demanding discounts. Despite the huge amount of work that teachers in schools have put in to scramble to maintain continuity where they can afford it, by going online, fees are under threat. Parents don’t want to send their children to school while the physical dangers are high. Schools cannot survive this.

The disruption caused by the coronaviru­s disease laid bare the fact that institutio­ns were not necessaril­y delivering value. The school is easily unbundled.

We just moved classes, connect, and content to online media. Soon, we will become good at it, and extend it to all. A student will be served just as well with an online curriculum delivered by star teachers across the world. Or by supervised study groups in real or virtual spaces. On demand, with customisat­ion, this could be better than the old ways. One does not need to come into school for this. Teachers, too, can learn to create their magic via tuitions or other learning hubs.

Certificat­ion can easily be independen­t of schools. The informatio­n technology sector has been doing it for a while; scholastic assessment tests are not school-dependent at all. Students can register for any exams across boards, states, and countries. Exam operations can be in neutral centres, or online. We don’t need schools for exams. Administra­tion can hardly be a reason to have schools and universiti­es. Administra­tion is a software now.

Neither learning, nor assessment, needs to be tethered to one hub, except to serve regulation. Regulation can reform to support the unbundled parts too.

Social and emotional learning can be found in community and group-learning experience­s. One does not need specific school structures. Only sport needs local facilities. Even a corporate traineeshi­p provides that collegial experience. A student may do better participat­ing in a global competitio­n or hackathon than writing tests and essays for an in-school assessment. They can find friends in the local park, or football club, not necessaril­y at school. If school finds itself parcelled out, then it must ask itself this existentia­l question: What is the true value of school?

Other sectors have been disrupted before, and so too can education. Ancient universiti­es disappeare­d, as did entire school systems. It can happen again. The unbundling of the school package has been made visible. Schools and colleges can be disinter-mediated, and students may find it easier to directly access learning that serves their goals. For many, schools were overly rigid, restrictin­g their personal journeys. For others, schools forced a generic pace. For some with talent, schools were limiting. All teachers know that much of their energy and effort at school is spent in boxing in a variety of students into one set of curricula and goals. Schools bind students to them with laws, enforcemen­t, a monopoly on progressio­n, and habit.

Schools also bind students to them with the love of learning, with purpose, with direction and support. Schools and universiti­es do provide value, but it is not where they think it is. It is not where it was. This disruption has revealed our vulnerabil­ities. But it has also given us a reason to seek true value.

As educators and as institutio­ns, our task is to answer this question: What is the true value of schools? And then to deliver for value, not to habit or regulation.

THIS DISRUPTION HAS REVEALED

OUR VULNERABIL­ITIES. BUT IT HAS ALSO GIVEN US A REASON TO SEEK TRUE VALUE. AS EDUCATORS AND INSTITUTIO­NS, WE MUST ANSWER: WHAT IS THE TRUE VALUE OF SCHOOLS?

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