Insights & Analysis

Is online education here to stay?

The pandemic has been a major disruptor in education systems across the world, but are virtual classrooms just a fad?

A World Bank report says that the COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted education in over 150 countries and affected 1.6 billion students. Poocho decided to decode the experience of students who pursued a variety of online courses during this time. While some schools and colleges have tentatively started offline classes, with the virus still not completely eradicated, there is always a chance of closure of educational institutions; which is why most of them are still equipped with a hybrid mode for studies.

But is online education going to be just a pandemic fad or is it here to stay? The research conducted by RAND Corporation seems to suggest that there are a number of parents, students and teachers who would prefer to continue in the online mode.

A 22-year-old female MBA aspirant who took online coaching for CAT, seemed to prefer the online mode. Speaking to Poocho, she said, “I think it gives us more time. It saves us from travelling and it saves us a lot of peer pressure; unnecessary negativity that surrounds us. I think it's going great. It also has some inconveniences but I think now I'm kind of okay with it. Like sitting in a room and only focusing on what I want to do.”

While this young lady seems to like the extra concentration a lonelier studying atmosphere gives, not all are fans of this student and screen alone kind of experience. In his piece in Inside Higher Ed, Peter C Herman argues that students are resistant to a permanent online set up. He did a survey with his own students who reported a lack of learning, understanding and an assured structure that helped learning prior to going online.

An MBA aspirant who studies at ICFAI, underlined the mid-course shift from offline to online to Poocho in this manner, “Retention is less. Level of concentration has gone down drastically. You know, when you went to college, you had a purpose that, okay, you have to wake up, you had a proper routine that was being followed. This is not there anymore. If I have a class at 9:30, I'll probably wake up at 9:30. Because we have five minutes of window ki bhai theek hai, you can be five minutes late. I just turn on the class, go freshen up, and then attend the class. Yeah, that purpose is not there. When the class is not that interesting, or something like that. But yeah, that is one thing that is also missing. Discipline is missing.”

Doubt resolution in the online mode featured prominently for most students. An SSC aspirant Poocho spoke to said online classes made it difficult to access what was being taught. “The thing with me since I was a kid, is I have like, you teach me one topic, a small one topic, and I'll put up like, 500 questions. 500 doubts. And in online classes, I can't do it. So it's like quite irritating. In the offline class, you can just go to some library and just get some book. And then you can ask the teacher, that teacher can read the particular part of the book and then explain you but... in online, what you can do is like, just sit and watch.”

However, in a piece in the New York Times, Natasha Singer argues that online mode of education could come as a boon for children with anxiety issues or those scarred by bullying or discrimination. In her report she talks of how many school districts in the United States have decided to invest in long term online solutions to go hand in hand with their offline classes.

With most schools and colleges in India saying they would go fully offline from the next academic year, students will have another round of adjusting to a new normal. Offline or online, the important thing for them is that there should be no learning loss. 

SPOTLIGHT
Insights from the most recent consumer transcript added to our database
Last question, which apps on your smartphone do you think you can’t live without?
In my life there are different priorities currently...usually my social media is very active , but since I am thinking about my career right now, I’ve turned off my notifications... I like Facebook, Instagram, and a bit of Whatsapp...for shopping I use Myntra, Flipkart, Amazon, Meesho...in games, there is a game called Beach war, and Pubg of course...I joined Facebook in 2012, but 2013 is when I started coming on more actively. Facebook has news feed...what is happening around us...those things, pages that tell you what all is happening...I look at those.
Can you take me through your schooling and college experience a little in-depth?
If I talk about my study schedule as to how I was, I was in another school till class 3 in a Hindi medium school (Adarsh Shiksha Niketan school), I was not at all into studying - wouldn’t study at all. Then, in 2006 my father enrolled me in an English medium school....there were exams in every term... I came first in all three terms. Everyone supported me a lot... my father, my teachers...because to change from a Hindi medium school to an English was a very hard thing to do. I really struggled...I did a lot of labour work, as i became a success...my confidence level rose as well. In 11th and 12th, there wasn’t an option for English medium school, so I had to enrol in a Hindi medium school, and took English coaching on the side, studied and gave my exam I got 66 percent  .  Then there was an option for B.Sc (Bachelors in Science), but I knew I wouldn’t understand much of it... so its better if I do BCA (Bachelors in Computer Applications). I did 3 years of college for BCA...I did a lot of coding which I really liked, so I came back and I did but there were some parts of coding which I didn’t want to do...so in the 2 years I realised that it wasn’t for me. After completing 2 years of it, I wanted to get into teaching which is why I did Diploma in education Elementary education. I decided that I don’t want to teach in a private school, I want to teach in a government college for unprivileged kids. Either I am able to do this or turn to having my own start-up.
What else do you get up to online?
I love watching web-series and movies, so when any new movie or web-series comes, I first read about the what the movie is based on then I watch the movie. For example , there is a movie or a web-series , I search the name on google and it shows the cast, the story...so I read the whole thing. Then I get to know and understand what the motto is to make the movie. If I like what I read only then I go and watch it. Also no matter how good the start is or the story , If I don’t vibe with it in the beginning...then I don’t vibe with the movie as a whole. ...have you always done this, or just with movies and web-series ? I have started doing this for 3 years and at first I would watch movies through the day, but then work would come to me out of the blue therefore there would be distractions... so my system is that If you ever watch a movie , watch it with full dedication and only then would you have fun. ...so after that do you download it, or do you watch it online on a platform?  I watch online if it is available... the rest I haven’t gotten the subscription. The thing is that I’m a student right now, can’t afford to spend, I have to save up. When you start earning only then I can think to spend... I don’t have the money right now , when i do have it then i will surely do it, when I earn well.
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