Create a free Diverse: Issues In Higher Education account to continue reading. Already have an account? Enter your email to access the article.

Coronavirus Silver lining—Online Learning?

Emil Photo Again Edited 61b7dabb61239

Most of us are realizing the consequences of an inadequate public health response to the coronavirus, a/k/a COVAD19.

When an inordinate amount of budget monies are given to the military, we leave ourselves open to other enemy fronts like disease and illness. Not enough tests, not enough information, not enough knowledge leading the fight. Is the private sector stepping in? Not fast enough.

In the meantime, everyone is in the same boat trying to find answers in order to protect themselves, and their way of life. By now, you know the virus is like a bad cold approaching pneumonia. It’s a killer. And it’s spreading across the U.S. If you have a cold or some sort of virus, if not the actual coronavirus, a mask will prevent you from spreading your germs. But masks won’t keep you from getting the germs. It’s not reassuring when the best thing you can say is drink  fluids and  wash your hands.

People who have travelled to known places of the virus should get tested. But the rest of us? This is where a president comes in. And this one’s response to coronavirus is about as scientific as his response to climate change. It may just go away, he says. “We’ll see what happens,” is his stock phrase. Could get better or worse, he says.  Does he care?

Only about the stock market, and you can see how that’s whiplashing. So into the unknown we go—even higher ed. Maybe this is an opportunity for more of higher ed to further explore something innovative in curriculum—like on-line learning. Some of you have ridden the tech train to great results. But others have been slow to adapt. Tech isn’t just the province of the for-profit private institutions that are favored by Education Secretary Betsy DeVos. Nor is tech  about on professional development,  self-improvement, and hobbyist lifestyles.

It’s for everything we teach in a university setting. And  when the president of my university to which I serve as an adjunct sends out a letter saying it’s our responsibility to make sure we can teach in a continuous uninterrupted fashion, that’s a signal that we can no longer ignore the tech. Teaching online through tools like Zoom and others are not just cool toys. They’re real tools of modern education and the students know it, but it’s still not fully embraced by the  generation that remembers the library catalogue file.

Now learning is a matter of life and death. Too extreme? OK , then how about just public health. It’s being forced on all my colleagues, some who may have been reluctant, to get on board, and it’s about time. I’ve known the power of digital learning from listening to podcasts and audio books.

The trusted source for all job seekers
We have an extensive variety of listings for both academic and non-academic positions at postsecondary institutions.
Read More
The trusted source for all job seekers