Inclusive Learning and Educational Equity 5
Introduction: Education in the Pandemic Period—Risks
Download 5.65 Kb. Pdf ko'rish
|
978-3-030-80658-3
6.1 Introduction: Education in the Pandemic Period—Risks
and Opportunities for Changing the Teaching-Learning Process The COVID-19 pandemic and the closure of schools have put teachers and pupils (and their parents) in a new, extremely difficult situation. This brought a great chal- lenge to the entire educational environment, which had to adapt rapidly to the new working conditions. As a matter of fact, the pandemic and its limitations are seen in terms of difficult situations (Sli ż, 2020 ) and even shock (Cellary, 2020 ) in many areas of human activity, and in a particular way, this shock has affected education. As Jemielniak ( 2020 , 35) somewhat humorously notes, the need for a sudden transition from traditional to online learning occurred so violently and shockingly that ‘the rapidity of change can be compared to learning to swim by participating in a Titanic disaster’. What happened in spring 2020 in education has been referred to as emergency online learning, that is, ‘emergency transfer to cyberspace of forms of education’ previously implemented in the traditional way (Kra śniewski, 2020 , 40). Although online education has advanced a lifeline during the pandemic, both scientists and practitioners agree that there are a number of different risks associated with changing education from traditional to online form. Many schools have started to change the form of teaching from at-school education to online education. It should be noted with sadness; however, that in Poland not all students have had the opportunity, especially during the beginning of the pandemic, to take full advantage of online learning, as some of them did not have their own computer equipment or were in need of sharing it with other family members. This situation has carried the risk of digital exclusion (Cellary, 2020 ) and, in addition, cost to education. In this situation, it is worth looking for innovative solutions and drawing on the experience of those who have been conducting online education for a long time (Tomczyk, 2020 ). Among the risks associated with students staying at home and participating in education online, there are a whole series of worrying problems. The first is associ- ated with a negative impact of this situation on the psyche. For every person, espe- cially at a younger age, this new, hitherto unknown situation can result in a threat to mental health and can be accompanied by anxiety and a sense of uncertainty (Poleszak & Py żalski, 2020 ). It is also difficult to control organisational issues. Thus, students who have hitherto been heavily guided and controlled by the teacher in a Polish school have had to take care of self-organisation and self-discipline themselves. Online education also loosens peer ties and causes social isolation (Py żalski & Poleszak, 2020 ). Limitation of social contact, especially with peers, can have seri- ous consequences for a child’s well-being and emotional development, which is why it is so important to support students in maintaining relationships with other children. The child, without participating in real-life social situations, gradually ceases to understand them. As a result, he/she can feel lonely and misunderstood and rebellion and aggression can emerge. That is why it is so important to create J. Baran et al. 121 opportunities for cooperation, for example, by planning online teaching tasks in such a way that they require group work. The fact that sitting in front of the monitor for hours causes musculoskeletal disorders and causes visual impairments cannot be underestimated. Prolonged sit- ting and constant homogeneous movements (e.g., typing, using the mouse) strain the muscles in a static way and put pressure on the intervertebral discs. Therefore, people sitting too long and too often at the computer are more likely to have spinal defects, scoliosis, pain in the neck, shoulder girth, back (especially lumbar region) and hands (especially hands). Intense and prolonged light stimuli coming from the monitor strain the eye, causing redness, burning and tearing of the eyes and blurred vision (Kuku łka, 2006 ; Garwol, 2017 ). In addition, children who spend hours in front of the computer using the Internet may begin to treat it as an oracle and indiscriminately believe in its content, putting total confidence in its unlimited (in their view) possibilities. Instead of creating themselves and the world around them, they may begin to think and act schematically. Because of the impov- erishment of contact with other people and the limitation of their knowledge to the virtual world, their knowledge of the real world may be incomplete. Modern media used in excess have a negative impact not only on physical and mental health, but also on attention, memory, intellectual abilities, creativity and time management (Piecuch, 2016 ; Furmanek, 2014 ). Access to the vastness of information on the Internet, closely linked to online teaching, is, on the one hand, an opportunity for continuity of education. On the other hand, it should not be forgotten that, as Cellary ( 2020 , 22) points out, ‘the Internet contains everything and denials of everything: what is good and what is bad is beautiful and hideous, ethical and unethical, precious and not, important and invalid’. Jemielniak ( 2020 , 36) argues that ‘students participating in online educa- tion may be tempted to multitasking—seemingly attending online lessons, while also dealing with other activities, e.g. playing a favorite game or even … nap’. It is very tiring to participate in online lessons for many hours. The human brain is not adapted to this form of contact with other people. ‘Even small distortions of sound or video transmission and the limitation or even inability to observe the mim- ics or speech of the other person’s body require considerable additional perceptual effort’ (Jemielniak, 2020 , 36; Kaczmarzyk, 2020 ). It is not insignificant that chil- dren—no less than adults—also feel tension and anxiety associated with the threat to their family’s health and economic situation, while experiencing helplessness and lack of impact on the situation. Online learning is associated with risks not only for students, but also for teach- ers. Of course, like students, and probably even more tired of the situation’s social and physical discomfort, they experience anxiety associated with a sense of danger to their lives and loved ones. They are accompanied by a sense of great responsibil- ity, including towards their own students and the parents of the students. The reports on online teaching in Poland show that ‘teachers, especially in the initial period of online learning, experienced understandable discomfort due to a lack of technical competence—they did not know or did not know enough online learning tools and, of course, in this situation did not have the proficiency in using 6 The Use of the UDL Approach as a Factor in the Success of Inclusive Education… 122 them’ (Kra śniewski, 2020 , 46). ‘Many of the teachers even experienced a very strong fear of new technologies and new media’ (Skowron, 2020 , 140). Another problem for teachers is that in the age of online education there has been a complete blurring of the work-home barrier. ‘Many teachers worked while having to take care of their own children, organising care for them on their own, cooking lunches and helping them learn and organise leisure time’ (Jemielniak, 2020 , 35). What is more, it is well known that working almost all day becomes much less effective or even inefficient. ‘The challenge for teachers was not only the transmis- sion of knowledge, but also the verification and evaluation of learning outcomes. And this was recognised as an important issue at every level of education, from elementary to university education’ (Kra śniewski, 2020 , 41). It should have a form of assessment for learning (Sterna, 2020 ). The situation of teachers is hardly improved by the fact that at the legal and formal level there is a lack of precise regu- lation of teachers’ duties (Koncewicz, 2020 ). In the situation of online teaching, based to some extent on self-searching for information and deciding which is valuable and which is not, teachers face a unique task. Although they have lost their dominant position and are no longer the main source of information, knowledge and skills, they must remain, according to Cellary ( 2020 , 22), a ‘reference point and ordering factor’ and must help students ‘focus on learning what is important and forward-looking, rather than wasting time on what is superficial, though attractively given’. Thus, the teaching profession at every level ‘is becoming one of the most changing in the near future’ (Cellary, 2020 , 22). Paradoxically, the difficult reality that teachers, students and parents have had to contend with every day of online teaching/learning may bring a lot of good in the field of education (Walter, 2020 ). The pandemic is not only a litmus test of the digi- tal competences of teachers, pupils and the degree of preparation of schools for crisis situations, but also a test of empathy, humanity and ordinary human kindness, and makes them aware of the importance of these values. The situation of school closures will certainly change the approach of many prin- cipals and teachers to the digital school. It will mobilise to retrofit institutions with the right equipment and start a period of real development of the competences for the future in our schools. The experience of online learning can also contribute to moving away from traditional teaching, from lectures serving students with ready- made content in favour of more independent learning, seeking information, select- ing it and thinking critically. Physical isolation from peers could also make us realise how important another person is and how relationships with others are needed and teach us how to take care of those relationships. Perhaps the transition to online education will also lead to a paradigm shift in education and an understanding that education is not the most important core curriculum, assessment or factography, but self-planning and organ- isation of learning, which can be beneficial for the whole of a human life. J. Baran et al. |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling