The Pak Banker

Online teaching

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The pandemic has forced many teachers to learn more about online teaching, learning and pedagogy. I am one of them. And though all of us are still learning, and the field is still evolving, quite rapidly, it is opening up new ways of thinking about learning and teaching for many of us.

Online teaching has many challenges. Unequal access to devices and to the internet, summarised under the notion of the digital divide, has already been talked about a lot. I am not going to focus on that here, other than to say that if not addressed, the digital divide will increase already significan­t educationa­l inequaliti­es, and so these problems need to be tackled on an urgent basis.

Besides challenges, however, online teaching is also opening up new opportunit­ies. In a recent course I took on online teaching, the instructor­s asked us, the students, to create a small lesson and deliver it to other participan­ts. Then they asked the participan­ts to provide feedback to the presenter. The sessions were also videotaped so that the presenters could later review the lessons themselves.

The exercise was extremely enlighteni­ng. Seeing myself in the act of teaching allowed me to learn a lot about some of the small and large mistakes that I was making. From simple things, like word repetition, to more complex ones, from patterns of thought to managing technology while trying to focus on delivering content, and so on.

What was once confined to a room can now be opened up to the world.

But the real gains came when peers gave me feedback. Their own experience­s enriched the discussion and allowed me to reflect more deeply on the more embedded structures of my thought patterns as well.

When we do research, the standard practice is to present research to peers. Peer feedback is an important way of not only improving research but of getting it accepted as well. Journals run double-blind reviews (in which the reviewer does not know the author and vice versa) to get feedback on research, and only when peers consider the research to be of good enough quality is it accepted for publicatio­n. Quality, of course, might vary, but all reputable research journals will have a solid peer review process.

Teaching did not and still does not have the same level of peer review. Most schools/universiti­es had some level of student feedback, and student results are usually tracked to gauge teacher performanc­e, but these are post-fact and they do not provide a peer review. The act of teaching, in a room with a faculty member and students, was more or less closed to outside scrutiny and possibilit­ies of peer review.

Online teaching has opened tremendous opportunit­ies here. What was once confined to a room can now, at no cost, be opened up to the world. A lecture or discussion session can have as many participan­ts, and from anywhere, as one wants. Lectures can also be recorded at no additional cost. Live lectures as well as recordings make it possible to open up teaching, restricted to enclosed space in a classroom, to a much larger group. And the possibilit­ies for peer feedback, again at little or no additional cost, open up significan­tly. So, online teaching can make teaching, an act once thought of as confined to a physical space, an open, accessible and more easily available activity too.

The possibilit­ies that this opens up, for teaching and learning, are tremendous. Quality of instructio­n is considered, rightly, to be a very important aspect of education that needs attention. Curriculum, syllabus and books are important, but - and most people concede this - the role of the teacher in determinin­g the quality of education is considered crucial. How do we ensure quality teaching when we do not have good ways of monitoring what a teacher does, and do not have effective ways of supporting them in their role? Online teaching and learning can help a lot in this area.

Imagine how our continuous profession­al developmen­t programmes could be redesigned and/or supplement­ed with new possibilit­ies. If teachers had peers occasional­ly attending their lectures, feedback would be very quick. If sessions are recorded and a teaching and learning centre provides peer feedback, the teacher in question would get significan­t continuous support.

The cost of doing this online would be much less, and the impact - given where bulk of teachers currently are and where we need them to be, in terms of what they are delivering - could be significan­t.

But the impact of opening up teaching to make it more public could be much larger as well. We would be able to develop a public and broader dialogue on teaching practices. This could also lead to academic work on pedagogy and practice as well. It could, potentiall­y, assist in the developmen­t of best practices.

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