Education After COVID
COVID-19
has shined a light on the education system worldwide. Many educators
have had to really evaluate their teaching methods and determine
whether they have truly been meeting the needs of all of their
students. Virtual learning has become a way of life as COVID-19
has forced many students to learn from home as well as many teachers
to teach from home. As virtual learning is continuously being
evaluated, there is a need to look back to life before the 2020
pandemic to see if there has always been a need for virtual learning
and compare it to the reality of today.
Learning
prior to COVID-19
Virtual
learning did not just evolve with COVID-19.
The question is: Was
there a need for virtual learning prior to the COVID-19 pandemic? As
an educator, my answer is yes. There were many occasions when
I had a student who
was in the hospital or out sick for an extended period of time and
who,
of course, still needed to learn. To be able to still have that
student connected to their classmates and the live teaching in the
classroom would have been awesome. I believe that even students that
were suspended should have had, at the very least, access to the
recording of the live lesson that was taught that day so that they
would not fall behind in their learning.
So,
why was there not more known or heard about virtual learning? Were
the resources available to provide learning in this way? Yes, they
were. Were teachers aware of access to the necessary tools for
virtual learning? Yes and no, but maybe not for use in the way that
it is currently being implemented today. There are many questions as
to whether there was a need or a place for virtual learning prior to
COVID-19. One way to answer those questions is to evaluate the
reality of virtual learning today.
Today’s
reality
The
reality of virtual learning today is that it has been a life saver in
the midst of the COVID-19
pandemic. As many school systems were forced to close, for the safety
of students and teachers, virtual learning became a way of life to
keep students from falling behind in their learning. Today’s
reality has also shed light on areas, as educators, we need to work
on to meet the needs of all students. Due to our current situation,
still enduring the COVID-19
pandemic, educators have actually reached students that were not
being reached prior to the pandemic. Student voice is important, and
students have voiced their opinion about virtual learning. Although
all students do not feel that they learn best virtually, many have
found that this method of learning has been effective.
COVID-19
has challenged the way learning takes place, and several students and
teachers have spoken out about how this has affected teaching and
learning. My daughter is a virtual learner, and I had the
opportunity to ask her about her thoughts on virtual learning. She
has stated that she definitely likes being able to learn in the
comfort of home. She has still been able to interact with her
classmates and teachers through the use of several features available
in the different video conferencing tools such as break out rooms and
white boards as well as through interactions with their learning
management system, LMS. For other students, like my daughter, who
are a little shy in the face-to-face classroom, virtual learning has
opened a door to a different way to still be involved in the learning
process.
After
also speaking with the teachers, from the local children’s hospital
that typically work with students that are hospitalized for extended
periods of time, I was informed that virtual learning has been the
best thing that has happened to their students. One teacher
explained that normally she, and others, would be responsible for
teaching the students, in the different content areas, but that they
would have little to no interaction with the students and teachers at
the school in which they are enrolled. Since the pandemic has forced
the addition of virtual learning, their students have now been
reconnected to their actual classrooms and have been able to interact
with their teachers and classmates. This has allowed the hospital
teacher now to simply follow up with the students, as the hospital
teacher is also included in the virtual classroom sessions. This has
truly changed the dynamics of how the students that are in the
hospital are learning.
Looking
ahead
As
educators think past the days of COVID-19,
being locked down or only being partially back in session, virtual
learning should still be considered a way for students that are
unable to be present in school to continue to learn with their
classmates and teacher. At
this point,
as
many
administrators and educators are looking ahead to the next semester
with the hope that there will be no more COVID-19, plans should be
considered for how virtual learning will continue to be a part of the
learning process for students.
About the Author
Dr. Ursula Martin has been an educator for 18 years. She was previously a secondary teacher teaching Biology, Anatomy and Physiology, and Environmental Science. She is currently a district level instructional technology resource teacher and an adjunct instructor for online undergraduate students. She can be found on LindedIn and Twitter