The Pak Banker

Support for teachers

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TEACHERS, irrespecti­ve of the level they are teaching at, have had to make major changes in the way they teach over the last few months. And they have had to adapt quite quickly as well. Schools and universiti­es were closed in mid-March.

But within a few weeks, many universiti­es and schools started to take their instructio­n online. By June, almost all universiti­es had gone online. Most medium- to highfee private schools went online as well, while teachers in even low-fee and NGO-supported schools worked out hybrid systems to restart at least some teaching activity again.

This change, still continuing, has been hard. Teachers were used to teaching face to face. Suddenly they were told they had to teach through the internet. They had to learn how to use new programmes. They had to quickly adapt their teaching material, as much as possible, to the new medium. The assessment­s had to change as well.

The pandemic has not gone away. It is being said that if the pandemic remains under control, schools and universiti­es across the country might be allowed to open up in mid-September. This will be under strict standard operating procedures. The risk of outbreaks will increase if schools and universiti­es do open. So, we might have partial shutdowns even during the academic year, and it might happen more than once.

Given all of the above, there will continue to be heavy demands on teachers. They might have to do teaching in hybrid mode: face to face at times and online at others. Or even both at the same time. They will need to have contingenc­y plans in case schools/universiti­es are closed suddenly and for weeks on end.

The need to adapt to the pandemic will continue to place heavy demands on educators.

Teachers will continue to learn about new programmes and new ways of delivering classes. In the last six months alone, we have moved away from simple synchronou­s classes on Zoom/Teams to many other platforms and with a mix of asynchrono­us and synchronou­s. In synchronou­s classes, even breakout rooms have become more common. New ways of engaging students and making content interactiv­e and interestin­g are being devised all the time. Teachers will need to have access to new resources as they become available and they will need to continue to experiment with modes to find things that work better for them and their students.

On the pedagogica­l side, too, experiment­ation and innovation will continue. Given unstable internet connection­s - which is the case for residents in larger cities too - there is a tendency to explore asynchrono­us modes of teaching. But student interest is better captured through synchronou­s teaching. How do teachers balance the two imperative­s? How can asynchrono­us teaching be made more interestin­g, and how can synchronou­s teaching be made less heavy on bandwidth?

This has implicatio­ns for assessment­s as well. Face-to-face teaching in Pakistan, across the system, relied heavily on summative assessment­s. But summative assessment­s are very difficult to conduct online, and they are less effective as well. Timed examinatio­ns, when internet is unstable, are difficult to manage. Issues of cheating also become quite hard to manage. For fairer assessment­s, teachers have to think more in terms of formative assessment­s. Assessment­s that they can do continuous­ly as students engage with the course material, especially in asynchrono­us environmen­ts, need to be thought through and these assessment­s need to be aligned with teaching goals and objectives. This in and of itself requires a fair bit of effort.

Teachers have to adapt and adapt material to online teaching too. The easiest thing to do is to use the same readings and just record the lecture that one would do face to face and send that video to students. They would have access to the readings and lectures. But that is not what optimal online teaching is about. The reading material needs to be adapted to online teaching. It might mean supplement­ing readings with presentati­ons, short audio/video lectures on key concepts, written and/or audio/video responses from students, and interactiv­e synchronou­s sessions in which to hold discussion­s.

Students are no longer sitting in front of teachers. It is hard enough getting and keeping their attention when they are captive in a classroom environmen­t. To have to do that when children are home, and when home environmen­ts vary a lot and there might be many things competing for their attention, the material has to be a lot more engaging and interactiv­e.

The coming academic year is not going to be a normal one. When students come back, many might not have had access to any educationa­l material for months, other might have had regular classes. Teachers will need to assess the level of learning for their students and then they will have to meet the students where the students are.

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 ??  ?? Teachers were used to teaching face to face. Suddenly they were told they had to teach through the internet. They had to learn how to use new programmes. They had to quickly adapt their teaching material, as much as possible, to the new
medium.
Teachers were used to teaching face to face. Suddenly they were told they had to teach through the internet. They had to learn how to use new programmes. They had to quickly adapt their teaching material, as much as possible, to the new medium.

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