Course:EDUC5990 summer 2020

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Lessons and observations from the great switch to online delivery in 2020!

For this part of the course, rather than me providing all the readings, links and resources, we are rather going to collaboratively create the content over 10 or so days. I expect that further things to explore as well as tangents on what we have here initially will evolve as the class adds content and ideas to the wiki. On this, you can also add media of various sorts and the video in the course Moodle highlights some of the editing options. Please note that this activity, to collectively develop and explore ideas related to this is the main content for this week. Also, please note that this week's discussion questions are linked to this as well.

Ideally, we'll have some rich descriptions and commentary to accompany various links, media, etc.

The COVID-19 Pandemic and Education

Lessons and perspectives from Educators

Educators around the world have ....

A Faculty Perspective on COVID-19 Teaching: It's Too Soon to Make Pronouncements. By Andrew D. Spear.

All across the world, schools and universities have shut because of COVID-19. Globally, all children are out of the classroom. Consequently, education has dramatically transformed with the rise of e-learning, in which teaching is done remotely and on digital platforms and this greatly affects the bod between teachers and students as students rely on educators not only fro academics but also for social and emotional learning. Here is a source which tell us about how this pandemic it becomes a challenge for teachers and students click here. and here is a guidance form UNESCO Institute to how to shift online. Click here

Real-life picture of a teachers desk during the Covid 19 online learning March-June 2020

Lessons and perspectives from Students

What will Education look like in September 2020 Due to Covid 19

CBC - News Source https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/bc-schools-reopening-online-learning-september-1.5596381

- it's "very likely,'' to be a hybrid online and in-class model. - "I fully expect all children will be back in some sort of a classroom environment come September,''

- The guidelines that limit classroom capacity to 50 per cent for kindergarten through Grade 5 and 20 per cent for middle school and high school won't change before September

BC Curriculum - https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/education-training/k-12/support/classroom-alternatives/online-distributed-learning

- In this style of learning, students can connect with their teacher from anywhere in the world on their own schedule and their own terms. This approach is called distributed learning (DL).

- Teachers use a wide variety of electronic tools to teach their students including voice and video conferencing over the Internet, email, telephone calls and others.
Online course and program finder - https://www.learnnowbc.ca/Courses/

Lessons and perspectives from Institutions

Younger learners (K-5)

Hope where are you?

Given these turbulent times, many people have found ways to utilize educational technology to connect with their students. Not everyone’s’ experience being away from school, however, has been the same!

I recently attended a Webinar session hosted by the Alberta Teachers’ Association (ATA) with Armand Doucet, one of the authors of Hope where are you? a children’s book that was written and produced in collaboration with a number of volunteers, who were searching for ways trying to give back to the world. "Our dream is for as many children around the world to hear the story of Hope where are you? and for parents, carers and key adults to use it to support children during the time of COVID-19" (#Hope where are you?, 2020).

Their website has a variety of great, easy to implement educator resources, and you can download the book (in a multitude of languages) for free. Moreover, it has a Creative Commons License, so feel free to use and reimagine its potential at will. From a global social justice perspective, they have also partnered with UNICEF to help provide relief to those impacted the most by the COVID pandemic. As the Hope, where are you? book and the movement are still a work in progress, they are also still looking for volunteers for additional translations. I do not currently see any of our Indigenous languages represented yet, so if any of you have any “connections” to anyone that might be interested in participating, that would be AMAZING!

What I loved the most about the book, in reference to the author’s message is “Globally, we are all in this together” and that “We are in crisis learning, not online learning”, and “All our children/students have stories to share”, and finally “This book is not about giving hope, it is about finding hope!”- Armand Doucet

I think HOPE is found at TRU😉


Click HERE for more information about the #HopeWhereAreYou movement and their COVID-19 Response.

Alberta Teachers' Association Webinar Introduction: Hope, Where Are You? (Meet the Author)

A free children's book, titled “Hope, Where Are You?” Is the story of six children around the world who are experiencing school closures. Each story follows a similar pattern of frustration and challenge, finding their hope and importantly spreading their hope to others. 2020 will forever be known for COVID-19 and as the year in human history when almost all the schools in the world physically closed their doors to children and staff.

This book, which in just 3 weeks has spawned a global #HopeWhereAreYou movement will be the basis for an amazing discussion that you won’t want to miss.  It's been an unprecedented time and we are seeing the starting impact of school closures due to Covid-19 on children around the world. Schools will not be opening in the immediate future and when they do, they will look and feel very different to what they were like at the birth of the new year. Children are confused, many are scared, and the only constant seems to be the unknown. (May 28, 2020)


References

#HopeWhereAreYou. (2020). Retrieved June 02, 2020, from https://www.hopewhereareyou.com/

Fore, H. (2020, May 12). UNICEF: Coronavirus children's crisis appeal. Retrieved June 02, 2020, from https://www.unicef.org/coronavirus/covid-19/donate?utm_campaign=coronavirus


Grades 6-12

Online classes — How effective? By Samaira Guleria, Class X, Carmel Convent School, Chandigarh

Education

How the education will look like in future?[1] Teachers will be treated as robots who will provide course content and give feedback on assignments.

"What if virus is not sickness but a cure, and we are the virus to the Earth" Its need to teach students about how to protect the mother Earth?


Post-secondary

Academic Integrity, Privacy and Security Concerns

As education was forced to move to online delivery systems, it became a vital part of an educator's role to be informed about the privacy and protection of information legislation in their districts, provinces, and countries.

One of the essential aspects of Canada's FIPPA (Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act) regulations is the disclosure of the location where any data collected will be stored. If the servers are outside of Canada, one workaround is to provide students with consent forms regarding the handling and storing of their information to minimize the chances of a FIPPA breech (Lamb, n.d., as cited in EBBEATTIE, 2017). A full explanation of the application of FIPPA in British Columbia, Canada, can be found on BC Law's website.

Some technologies have clear privacy and data collection information, for example, this page on Discord's site. It provides details of where the data is stored, how it is used, and how users can request and delete all data about them in the servers.


Accessibility

Predictions

The COVID-19 Pandemic has Changed Education Forever. This is how. By Cathy Li and Farah Lalani

A vision of the use of technology in medical education after the COVID-19 pandemic by Poh-Sun Goh[1], John Sandars[2]

References[1]

  1. EBBEATTIE. (2017, December 14). FIPPA consent forms: A pedagogical opportunity for one B.C. post-secondary educator. bccampus. https://bccampus.ca/2017/12/14/fippa-consent-forms-a-pedagogical-opportunity-for-one-b-c-post-secondary-educator/

2. Pham, D. (2019). Higher education in 2050. Retrieved June 7, 2020 from http://www.cmmmagazine.com/cmm-articles/higher-education-in-

2050/#:~:text=In%202050%2C%20at%20least%2090,social%2C%20geographical%20or%20national%20boundaries.&text=Overall%20student%2Dstaff%20ratios%20of,1%20will%20be%20the%20norm.

3. Strauss, V. (2020, April 22). Perspective | How relationships between teachers and students are being tested in covid-19 crisis. Retrieved from https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2020/04/22/how-relationships-between-teachers-students-are-being-tested-covid-19-crisis/

4. UNESCO Institute. (2020, June 3). Guidances for online education by IITE and its partners. Retrieved from https://iite.unesco.org/news/guidances-for-online-education-during-covid-19-pandemic-by-iite-and-its-partners/

5. DK Films, (March 21, 2020). Corona virus-covid19 short film end of the world? Retrieved June 8, 2020 from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Gm9RYZCsPs