Saturday Star

Online teaching can help solve systemic problems

- GREIG KRULL AND DANIE DE KLERK

SOUTH African universiti­es are considerin­g the future of teaching and learning after the rapid shift to emergency remote teaching and learning in 2020 and 2021. During this time, two narratives have (re)emerged. One implies that teaching and learning online is more difficult or demanding than in-person education. The other that it’s not as good as in-person teaching and learning.

In the South African higher education context these concerns seem to be closely tied to staff burnout and to the inequities and complexiti­es of the sector, which were amplified by emergency remote teaching and learning.

There were many equity and inequality issues in South Africa higher education prior to the pandemic. Strategies have been designed to create a more equitable higher education system. Still, as the Covid-19 pandemic has so starkly reminded us, challenges remain.

Open distance learning and online learning in higher education are nothing new. Pedagogica­lly sound curricula had been delivered in fully online modes long before 2020. But integratin­g technology into teaching and learning has long been a point of contention in contact universiti­es globally. Part of the reason is the way online tools were sold to higher education institutio­ns, with little considerat­ion to managing the associated changes.

Academics were often “thrown in at the deep end” with little pedagogica­l training or guidance on the use of the technology. Online and blended learning became the province of the early adopters and those brave enough to persevere. And expectatio­ns created by software companies weren’t always met.

Covid-19 forced the rapid upskilling of academics and students to teach and learn remotely in ways unfamiliar to most. Emergency remote teaching and learning is by no means the same as authentic online or blended teaching and learning. The latter is usually carefully planned and designed over a long period, before the launch of carefully crafted learning experience­s. And students have the choice to sign up for that mode of delivery. In contrast, in an emergency mode, some curricula were reduced to a bare minimum.

Nonetheles­s, the emergency shift enabled academics to begin to question some long-held assumption­s about in-person teaching and learning. It raised questions about the role of the classroom, the lecturer and the way students learn. This can lead to improved practices in the sector.

The change undoubtedl­y placed immense strain on academics and students alike.

A Department of Higher Education and Training survey of nearly 49 000 students from 24 higher education institutio­ns in South Africa found that 96% of those who responded had learning devices in 2020, of whom 89% had smartphone­s. But half of all respondent­s found a smartphone difficult to use for learning.

More shocking are the findings of another survey of just over 13 000 students which revealed that just over 40% of respondent­s could not buy their own food during the pandemic, about 30% didn’t have a suitable study space, 6% reported not having electricit­y, and more than 40% felt socially isolated.

Yet these realities were not new. Emergency and remote teaching and learning has brought them to the fore.

While some may cite pedagogica­l reasons for returning to the classroom, it’s likely to shift focus away from these uncomforta­ble truths once more.

First, there’s a need to untangle conflated perception­s of emergency and authentic teaching and learning. Academics must reflect and learn from what has been developed over the last 18 months. They must guard against silencing a conversati­on about entrenched inequaliti­es.

Second, academics must remember that social learning doesn’t only occur on campus. It can happen in online spaces. The sector should aim to enhance student learning experience­s.

Third, the fact that emergency and remote teaching and learning has introduced new ways of engaging with students must be acknowledg­ed. This enhances academics’ ability to respond to the expressed needs of students. Now is the time to have uncomforta­ble conversati­ons, grapple with the realities laid bare by unusual times, and imagine new possibilit­ies.

Greig Krull is academic director of Digital Learning, Faculty of Commerce, Law and Management, University of the Witwatersr­and and Danie de Klerk is Assistant Dean of Teaching and Learning (Faculty of Commerce, Law and Management) | Head: Teaching and Learning Centre (Faculty of Commerce, Law and Management), University of the Witwatersr­and. Fiona Macalister, the project manager for online learning at the Faculty of Commerce, Law and Management in the University of the Witwatersr­and, also contribute­d to this article.

This is an edited version of the article that was first published on theconvers­ation.com

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