Post-COVID-19 Education: A Case of Technology Driven Change?
Panagiotis Photopoulos
a
, Ilias Stavrakas
b
and Dimos Triantis
c
Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, University of West Attica, Athens, Greece
Keywords: Technology Driven Change, COVID-19, Digital Education, Blended Learning, Online Learning, Globalised
Education, Face to Face Teaching.
Abstract: The transition from face to face to remote teaching during the COVID-19 health crisis, has been viewed by
privately owned companies, prestigious universities, international organizations and politicians as an
opportunity to promote the digital paradigm in education. A carefully carved rhetoric bundles the reduced
funding of education, the maturity of digital technologies and the experience of remote teaching during the
COVID-19 restrictions to promote the idea of rewiring and rethinking education as a synonym for change.
How will education look like after the COVID-19 crisis? Although an answer to this question cannot be
precise at the moment since it involves different stakeholders, this publication attempts to pinpoint some
aspects of the post-COVID-19 educational landscape as it emerges comparing various texts and sources.
1 INTRODUCTION
Models estimating the transmission of COVID-19
(Contoyiannis et al., 2020; Flaxman et al. 2020), have
raised worries concerning the likeliness of a series of
rolling school closures during a period of 18-24
months following the pandemic announcement.
International organisations like OECD (OECD,
2020a; OECD 2020b), the United Nations (UN,
2020), UNESCO (2020) and the World Bank have
published a number of documents making
recommendations on the immediate re-opening of the
educational institutions. Besides, these documents
include several ideas on the future of education in the
post-COVID-19 era. On the 5th of May 2020, i.e. in
a period when schools and universities were closed
and the number of casualties was rapidly increasing,
the OECD published “Back to school” (OECD,
2020b), while in August 2020 the United Nations
published the “Policy Brief: Education during
COVID-19 and beyond” (UN, 2020). Texts of
international organisations provide a clue on the
future of education. Narratives addressed by experts
and international organisations, become persuasive to
public and policy audiences (Miller, 2004 p.47).
International organisations, government officials,
a
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7944-666X
b
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8484-8751
c
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4219-8687
scientists, business leaders and other transnational
actors, articulate persuasive accounts on various
problems (Jasanoff, 2001; Miller & Edwards, 2001)
including post-COVID-19 education. These accounts
form the basis for understanding and interpreting the
current situation in education and by doing so, make
specific future options look preferable or even
inevitable.
In the recent years there is an increasing number
of environmental, economic and security issues,
which are considered to call for global cooperation.
International organisations like the World Trade
Organisation, the UN and OECD have acquired a
strong voice on issues that traditionally belonged to
the authority of the sovereign state. The authority
crisis and the reduced capacity of states and
governments to respond successfully to major issues
has opened the way for appealing to global policies
(Miller 2004, p. 46-49).
In agreement with the above considerations, in
2012, Andreas Schleicher, the Director for OECD’s
Directorate of Education and Skills, contended that
education is not anymore, an issue of domestic policy
but a global issue. This assertion was based on the
assumptions: a) That education “is not a place but an
activity”, b) The supposed superiority of international
Photopoulos, P., Stavrakas, I. and Triantis, D.
Post-COVID-19 Education: A Case of Technology Driven Change?.
DOI: 10.5220/0010481206030613
In Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Computer Supported Education (CSEDU 2021) - Volume 1, pages 603-613
ISBN: 978-989-758-502-9
Copyright
c
2021 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
603
comparisons like PISA (Program for International
Students Assessment) which, “have globalized the
field of education that we usually treated as an affair of
domestic policy” (Schleicher 2012).
2 DOING MORE WITH LESS
Both United States’ (Benson, 2020; Li, A.Y. 2017,
Krug, 2016) and European Universities (EUA 2011;
Kauppi, 2019) are suffering budget cuts since 2008.
Higher Education budgetary cuts have negative
impacts in various aspects of social life (DePillis,
2001). Despite the financial constraints, the number
of full-time students has dramatically increased in the
past few decades. This is partially because as
unemployment levels rise, more people are driven to
education to increase their competitiveness in the
labour market. The combination of the growing
number of students and reduced spending represents
a major concern for maintaining quality in higher
education (EUA, 2011).
Pay stagnation, a consequence of the financial
constraints imposed on Higher Education, affects
negatively the level of job satisfaction (Benson, 2020)
and productivity (DePillis, 2001) of the university
tutors. In the lack of an alternative vision (Kauppi,
2019), some universities have already closed some
offered programs (EUA 2011, p.5) while professors
are trying to accommodate professionalism
(Mintzberg 1979) with the consequences of reduced
funding. For example, the adoption of Computer
Assisted Assessment has been often attributed,
among other reasons, to its cost-effectiveness
(Mandel et. al. 2011; Loewenberger P. & Bull J.
2003; Bull & McKenna, 2004, Topol et. al. 2010).
Online and blended courses have gained accreditation
among researchers and university tutors, not only
because of their flexibility, pedagogy and ease of
access but also for their cost-effectiveness (Abdul
Rahman et al 2020; Vivitsou, 2019; Lieser et al,
2018), while students’ preference on traditional
classroom teaching does not appear to be a strong
factor to influence decisions (World Economic
Forum 2020; Krug, 2016). Budgetary cuts have been
often linked to changes in the public sector.
Following the eruption of the 2008 crisis, researchers
have focused on cutbacks in public sector
organizations, at the national rather than institutional
level (Schmidt, Groeneveld & Van de Walle, 2017).
COVID-19 crisis added more financial insecurity
to the universities. According to a recent publication
of the European University Association (EUA) “it is
foreseeable and of concern that the financial effects
will arrive in the coming years and there will be
austerity measures” (EUA, 2020). Similarly, 10%
budgetary cuts have been proposed for the European
Research Council (Nature, 2020). Moreover, for
public-sector organizations there is considerable
pressure to improve efficiency, by reducing costs,
improving quality, and increase responsiveness to the
clients’ needs (Curtain, 1993: 31). It is expected that,
public funding allocations across Europe will
decrease in the next two to four years (EUA, 2020)
For the universities that rely on student fees, there
are additional pressures because of less international
students’ enrolments, demands for reimbursement for
fees already paid, reluctance among students to pay
fees for online courses and high levels of student dept.
On the basis of this reality, alternative strategic
frameworks have been proposed for “reputed
universities” (Govindarajan V., Srivastava A.,
2020b), to expand their operations worldwide and
offer residential, blended and fully online degrees at
competitive prices.
3 THE VOICE OF THE
INTERNATIONAL
ORGANISATIONS
It was in 1996 when OECD raised the question of how
education would look like in the 21st century. The
Centre of Education Research and Innovation (CERI)
was commissioned to answer this question gathering
best practices and exploring alternative visions of the
school of tomorrow (Ninomiya & Mutch, 2008). On
the basis of this project OECD/CERI (2001) published
“What schools for the future”, which has greatly
influenced international thinking on educational policy
(Facer & Sandford, 2010). The document outlines six
scenarios for future education along three possible
trends: continuation of status-quo, re-schooling and de-
schooling.
Scenario thinking has been employed for years by
companies to cope with changes in the competitive
environment (Schwartz, 1996), but after 2000 it has
also been used by international organizations (OECD,
2001; OECD 2020a; WEF, 2009). The document
reflects the developed countries’ perspective and a
‘Western” world view (Ninomiya & Mutch, 2008).
Expressions like “distilling the infinite range of
possible futures”, “bringing together the big picture”
borrowed from the management jargon convey an
impression of an ideology free enterprise. Such future-
oriented projects have been criticized for reproducing
the ideal of a technology-rich, global knowledge
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economy, where technology enhanced learning is
considered as an essential modernizing feature for
education (Facer & Sandford, 2010).
The dominant paradigm in education is presented
as bureaucratic and adhering to the status-quo
(scenario 1), a rhetoric and reality that generates
discomfort and signals the need for change. Schools
and universities provide their members extensive
autonomy to perform their job. People outside
education e.g. managers and government
representatives, feel uneasy with such an autonomy
and try to impose external control introducing
mechanisms of supervision and standardization, which
usually impede and discourage professionals
(Mintzberg 1979, p.376). Bureaucratic management
undermines the knowledge base of the teachers as they
are asked to confront with detailed syllabuses,
administrative rules and bureaucratic procedures
usually in the name of quality. Additionally, as some
commentators notice, globalization pressures and the
influence of international organisations like the OECD
have increased governments’ intervention in education
and bureaucratic control (Dahlin, 2017, pp. 113-122).
Scenarios are “just stories” that can be discussed
more openly compared to actual policy choices
(OECD, 2020a p. 420). As Paul Schoemaker (1998)
explains, good scenarios connect to key managerial
concerns and therefore reflect particular interests.
Therefore, OECD scenarios propose the range of
probable and desirable futures (OECD 2001, p.76)
and as such, they rather describe the locus of the
futures of education compatible with certain values
and a OECD’s world view. OECD’s scenarios adhere
to the “leader-follower” stereotype where the leader
addresses solutions to long-standing problems, while
the follower stubbornly resists them. These
considerations are in resonance with Christopher
Warren’s description of OECD as an international
organization committed to democratic governance
and adherence to free market principles. OECD,
unlike the United Nations, is not a universal
organization and it is characterized by a clear
economic and political orientation (Warren, 1998).
For OECD the schooling system is characterized
by the following pathogenies: a) “politicized
education”, the classroom/teacher model, permanent
employment of the teachers and strong unions. b)
Teachers’ professionalism (named “craft”
professionalism) c) Much attention focuses on the
curriculum (OECD, 2001).
The factors destabilizing the dominant paradigm,
mentioned in scenarios 2 to 4, include: The
development of a political culture that supports
extended competition; privatization of various forms;
“efficiency” and “quality” become the prominent
criteria; individualization; ICT as a factor of radical
change to organizational structures of teaching and
learning; corporate interest in the learning market;
pressures from international surveys of educational
performance; competition between countries over the
model of education they adopt; high-trust
relationships between authorities, teachers and
employers; other professions involved in teaching-
learning; networking among teachers and more
flexible employment.
“Back to the Future of Education. Four OECD
Scenarios for Schooling” was published in September
2020, and renewed the scenarios on education
(OECD, 2020a). The new scenarios are: 1) Schooling
extended, 2) Education outsourced, 3) Schools as
learning hubs and 4) Learn-as-you-go.
Analysis of policy documents published by the
European Commission and UNESCO, shows that
there is consensus for promoting digital technologies
for learning in order to make education more
affordable and move away from outdated pedagogies
and learning environments (Vivitsou, 2019). The four
scenarios depart from the transition from face-to-face
to remote teaching during the COVID-19 pandemic
to promote the idea of a total transformation of
education based on technology.
The main characteristic of education as it emerges
out of the four scenarios is the Taylorisation of the
school. Knowledge is transferred from the educated
teacher to the computer network and education
becomes knowledge availability; many countries
operate common curriculum and assessment tools;
education becomes increasingly privatised; the
classroom/teacher model is replaced by the
classroom/individual adult model; there are
economies of scale; less teachers compared to today;
different job content; reduced control by the state and
reduced power for the teachers. Scenarios 1,2 and 3
are the realm of online and blended learning. Scenario
4 relies more heavily on artificial intelligence.
Scenarios 1,2 and 4 imply a more global context
while scenario 3 is more local. The transition from
face-to-face to remote teaching has strongly
influenced OECD’s scenario thinking. Although the
four scenarios reflect strategic objectives of the far
future, it is possible to influence policies of the near
future as well.
Beside OECD more universal organisations like
the UN, UNICEF and UNESCO have undertaken
certain initiatives and published their proposals
regarding return to schools and post-COVID
education. On September 2018 UNICEF announced
a new partnership with the University of Cambridge
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605
and Microsoft to develop a Learning Passport, a
digital platform that will facilitate learning
opportunities for children and young people within
and across borders. According to the “Learning
Passport Research and Recommendations Report
“the project’s specific aim is to improve the quality of
education for children who, for whatever reason, are
unable to access national education systems
satisfactorily, either temporarily or permanently”
(Cambridge University Press & Cambridge
Assessment 2020). On the 20th of April 2020,
UNICEF (UNICEF 20/4/2020) and Microsoft (2020)
announced that the platform has undergone rapid
expansion to facilitate country-level curriculum for
children and youth whose schools have been forced
to close due to COVID-19. On the 27th of October
2020 Sony Corporation of America announced its
participation and support to the program (Sony,
2020), while on the 28th of the same month UNICEF
announced that science content developed by twig
education and the Imperial College will be available
to Learning Passport users from Jordan, Somalia,
Timor-Leste and Ukraine (UNICEF, 28/10/2020).
“Reimagining education in the post-COVID-19
era” was published by UNICEF in October 2020
(UNICEF, 26/10/2020). The article reminds the
reader “We have the opportunity to move away from
a model of the school of the last century and
reimagine the school of the future. In this school,
learning will be happening not only in the
classrooms”. The article includes the picture of a little
girl holding a big mobile phone. A green-blue web
page is seen on the screen of the mobile phone saying
ESKOLA BA UMA (The school goes home). The
picture has been taken in the open air carrying the
message of “any place any time” learning. No desk,
no pen and paper, no teacher, digital pedagogy is free
of them. The girl smiles happily to the camera. She is
wearing a red T-shirt advertising the National
Development Plan (NDP), which is described by IMF
as “a participative process, involving constituents in
every sector of the economy to identify the problems
they face and to suggest solutions to those problems”
(IMF, 2005). In the background, which is blurred, a
woman is sitting on a stone, under a tree and next to her
a little boy is playing. The girl with the mobile phone
is the central person of the photograph, conveying the
message of student-centred education facilitated by
technology. The article gives out a clear message of
determination “There is no going back”. What is
needed, according to the article, is to leverage the
internet and technology. Education for all, means
internet connections for all. For poor countries, when
there is little or no infrastructure “blended and hybrid
models of education should be explored to accelerate
change in children’s education”. The role of the teacher
is rather diminished in the new educational normal.
4 POINTS OF CONVERGENCE
OECD’s four scenarios describe the locus of the
preferable futures of the globalized, technology
driven school system. Short term considerations
regarding the post-COVID education can be
identified in less futuristic texts such as "Coronavirus
special edition: Back to school, Trends Shaping
Education Spotlights” (OECD 2020b) and “Policy
Brief: Education during COVID-19 and beyond” (UN
2020).
Comparison of these documents brings to the
surface four points of convergence regarding post-
COVID education: a) The need to rethink education
in all its aspects as a rhetoric for a change to come, b)
The need for a new type of teacher c) Over-reliance
on technology signifying a technology driven change
and d) Vague descriptions on how these points join
together to form a techno-educational mix to solve
old existing problems in education.
The importance of technology as a lever for
increasing the “learning opportunities in a manner
never known before” (Jenkins, 2019) is one of the
taken for granted points in many texts of the
international organisations (Vivitsou, 2019). In
response to this, the UN and UNESCO propose to
expand the definition of the right to education to
include connectivity entitlement (UN, 2020;
UNESCO, 2020). The benefits of digital and internet-
based teaching are taken for granted and what is
needed is internet access for all (UNICEF, September
2020).
Subjective views and vague visions replace
evidence to make-up a new reality unknown to the
many. For example, Luthra and Mackenzie (2020)
inform us that “educators around the world have been
talking about the need to rethink how we educate
future generations” and that “technology will
continue to play a key role in educating future
generations” because what generation Z expects is
instant communication and feedback (Luthra,
Mackenzie 2020). There is a widespread optimism of
a successful change to come, as if the experience
gained during the COVID-19 crisis, removed long
standing problems, related to distance teaching.
Research has shown that online students must be
proficient readers exhibit self-direction,
independence and self-discipline (McDonald, Dorn &
McDonald, 2004), while McFarland et al. (2005)
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found that more and more students nowadays seem to
avoid studying. Instant feedback is central in the case
of online learning, although a recent publication
concluded that fast feedback is not enough to satisfy
the students (Landrum et al. 2020). Additionally,
distance education implies psychological isolation,
cultural distance (Stunkel, 1991) and a total
disruption of what is considered to be “students’ life”.
5 “A CHANGE IS GONNA COME”
It was only a few days after the World Health
Organization declared the coronavirus outbreak a
pandemic, when the first articles appeared on various
web pages to point out how the COVID-19 health
crisis could change education (e.g. Luthra, Mackenzie
2020). In a period when students and teachers, at all
levels, were trying hard to find their pace within the
distance teaching endeavor prophetical articles which
underlined how the COVID-19 crisis affects “how we
educate future generations” seemed to put education
on the fast forward.
After May 2020, when Emergency Remote
Teaching had been already widely adopted by
students and educators, the voices commenting on the
post-COVID higher education increased in
frequency: “Universities beware: shifting classes
online so quickly is a double-edged sword” (The
Guardian 20 May 2020a), “No sex, no booze: how the
move online will take all the fun out of university”
(The Guardian 20 May 2020b), “Post-pandemic,
remote learning could be here to stay (CNBC, 20
May 2020) “The Future of College Is Online, and It’s
Cheaper” (New York Times, 25 May 2020),
“Students like the flexibility: why online universities
are here to stay” (The Guardian 27 May 2020), “We
shouldn't go back to lectures: why future students will
learn online” (The Guardian 3 July 2020), “5 Major
Shifts Needed Post-COVID-19 to Transform
Education” (Center for Digital Education 12 August
2020), “L’enseignement supérieur bascule dans le
monde post-Covid” (Le Monde 14 August 2020). In
the case of Greece, government officials made clear
that synchronous distant teaching, as well as blended,
is going to be part of the post-COVID-19 higher
education reality. Similar views were also promoted
by a number of media (e.g. MEGA,2020; Kathimerini
1 June 2020).
Online teaching advocators consider that after
students and teachers have had a direct experience of
the specific technology, acceptance will be higher and
resistance lower. Such beliefs concerning the
acceptance of remote teaching in the post-COVID
era, are backed by theoretical considerations
developed within the technology acceptance
literature. Technology acceptance models consider
that prior experience of a certain technology is a
factor, exerting a positive influence towards the
acceptance of a technology (Abdullah, Ward &
Ahmed, 2016; Venkatesh, Davis 2000).
6 CRISES AS A TRIGGER FOR
CHANGE
Crises are considered to be opportunities for reform,
creating a state of shock, which facilitates bolder
intervention (Cepiku, Sauvignon 2012). Crises or
other external events are considered to generate the
necessary conditions for change (UNDP, 2006;
Govindarajan, Srivastava, 2020). The COVID-19
crisis has been considered by commentators as an
opportunity for change. “Crises can make innovations
that seemed previously impossible suddenly
inevitable… There will be years of a reckoning that
higher education institutions will go through. Higher
education institutions need reimagining, not just
repairing” (University World News, 2020).
Academic publications have commented on the
changes to come in Higher Education adopting
various perspectives: Govindarajan and Srivastava
(2020) mention that COVID-19 will affect education
provided that remote teaching experiment proves to
be a success. Zimmerman (2020) emphasizes on the
importance of research to show whether online
learning is good or bad for students.
Acceptance of a change is one of the central
questions in planned change management (Nutt and
Backoff, 1997). For most of the management
perspectives, creating and communicating a clear and
meaningful vision, is of paramount importance in
change management. Vision gives direction and
motivation to those experiencing the change (Palmer
et. al. 2014, pp. 172-184). In change management, the
vision promotes the proper way of understanding the
current situation and justifies the promises of the
proposed change. A new vision for change borrows
elements from real life properly selected and
interpreted. This may include crises, poor
performance, reduced budget etc. Change leaders or
other influencers use narrations and stories to frame
the interpretation of the current situation and generate
dissatisfaction with it. Dissatisfaction with the current
situation reduces scepticism and resistance for the
proposed change. Creating a proper vision is one of
the powerful tools for making the acceptance of the
Post-COVID-19 Education: A Case of Technology Driven Change?
607
proposed change the preferable option (Palmer at. al.,
2017 pp. 180-181). This is part of the legitimization
of the change, i.e. the wide acceptance by the
organization or the society that certain actions are
desired and appropriate (Landau et al. 2014).
Such practices have given rise to criticisms
regarding the ideological and ethical nature of several
change programs (Martin et.al. 1988). Change in
Organizations usually involves practices of
incontestable effectiveness but of debatable political
neutrality. As John Kotter, one of the leading figures
in change management comments: “In some
situations, managers also resort to covert attempts to
influence others. Manipulation, in this context,
normally involves the very selective use of
information and the conscious structuring of events”
(Kotter, Schlesinger; 2008).
Change is not easy and in number of cases it may
cause more problems than those supposed to solve.
Change is usually presented as a well-orchestrated
linear management initiative moving through the
well-known unfreeze, change and refreeze steps
(Cummings et al. 2016). Moving from face-to-face to
remote teaching can be considered as a case of change
management (Mishra et al., 2020), but change
management is not always successful.
There is a wide spread optimism that ICTs can
change education providing the opportunity for any
time, any place learning, modernise education, reduce
obstacles to learning for the poor and disadvantaged.
Nonetheless, this is not the first-time technology is
considered as the vehicle for revolutionary changes in
education.
Thirty years ago, the development of electronic
media and computers generated a widespread
optimism on the potential of global networks, which
would make distance irrelevant and provide
educational services to those unable to participate in
traditional campus-based learning (Stunkel, 1991). At
those days, as it happens nowadays, a number of
publications compared student performance in
traditional and computer mediated instruction to
conclude that media are mere vehicles to deliver
instruction and they do not influence student
performance (Whittington, 1987, Stunkel 1991).
Research conducted in the nineties had shown that
videotapes were a more powerful tool for instruction
compared to videoconferences because with the
former the students could pause, review, and take
more detailed notes (Lundin, 1989). Besides,
recommendations on proper combinations of
technologies promised more effective instruction
allowing the teacher to know which students are
keeping up, which ones are bored, and which ones
have questions, and the ability to queue them for
answers (Perkins, 1989).
The points raised in the publications of those days
sound very similar to contemporary ones. Not
surprisingly the terms used by the enthusiasts of those
days remind a lot of today’s vocabulary: Learner
control (Moore, 1988), high learner motivation
(Lundin 1989), learner-centred teaching (Knapper,
1988), new roles for faculty members (Strain, 1987)
and teacher training (Knapper, 1988). Some years
ago, it was believed that massive open online courses
would change the educational landscape, but face-to-
face teaching stood the test once more (Govindarajan
& Srivastava, 2020).
Inclusion of technology in the learning process is
attractive in itself opening the possibility of more
interesting and playful learning but its effectiveness
depends on the skills of the teacher and the attributes
of the students. Although, teacher’s contribution can
in principle be ameliorated by training, the students’
skills cannot be taken for granted (Sarewitz, Nelson,
2008). Factors like social relationships, inherent to
face-to-face teaching, play a pivotal role in accepting
technology driven changes in education. Indeed,
research has shown that lack of direct communication
with teachers and colleagues is the main pitfall of
online teaching (Landrum et al. 2020; Martínez-Caro
& Campuzano-Bolarín, 2011; Knowles & Kerkman,
2007).
7 THE TECHNOLOGICAL FIX
Recent publication of the UN and UNICEF focus on
long standing inadequacies of the educational
systems to consider the COVID-19 crisis as an
opportunity to introduce changes that were
unthinkable before (UN, 2020; UNICEF September
2020). Before the pandemic, 250 million of children
were out of school, 800 million of adults remained
illiterate and 56% of primary school children lacked
basic reading skills. The COVID-19 crisis made this
situation even worse (UN, 2020).
The above-mentioned documents suggest that
technology driven changes, can solve long standing
problems in education. In 2008 Daniel Sarewitz and
Richard Nelson spotted the difference in the
effectiveness of the various technological solutions
comparing vaccines and educational technology, two
artefacts which are dominant in today discussions. As
they notice, technological fixes can be successful if
they obey three rules: Firstly, they must largely
embody the cause-effect relationship connecting the
problem to the solution (Sarewitz and Nelson, 2004)
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in order to be effective. The effectiveness of a vaccine
is independent of the person who gives or receives it,
as well as the setting in which it is given. Unlike
vaccines, books, software, the internet and
communication technologies do not provide the
‘basic go’ of teaching and learning. The effectiveness
of technology mediated teaching is influenced by
many other factors and applying technological
solutions in education does not necessarily lead to
success. As the authors notice, years of research and
application of new technologies in education has
failed to translate to some significant overall
improvement in reading abilities. Secondly, there
must exist clear and unambiguous criteria in order to
assess the effectiveness of a technological fix.
Thirdly, successful technological solutions would
result from an existing standardised technical core.
Unlike vaccines, such an uncontroversial core is not
available in the case of education. Although only few
would disagree on the benefits of incorporating
technology in education, technological solutions in
education do not appear to comply with the
conditions set by Sarewitz and Nelson, at least to a
degree similar to that of other technological solutions
popular today, such as vaccines. Some problems of
our society are amendable to technological fixes,
while others are not. Decisions on technology
investment are difficult in a world of limited
resources and have long lasting implications.
8 CONCLUSIONS
One of the aims of this paper was to explore how texts
of international organisations influence our
understanding of the present and shape our
expectations of the future. OECD, an organization
characterized by a clear economic and political
orientation, has played a pivotal role in addressing
education as global, rather than an affair of domestic
policy. The underlying idea behind the four scenarios
(2020a) is that of a technology driven radical change.
A change that transforms not only education but also
the lives of teachers and students. Scenarios 1,2 and 3
bring to the fore a future of education which shares a
lot with Fordism, while scenario 4 reminds of a fully
digitalized, teacher depleted school. Such ground-
breaking changes signify a turning point in schooling
and make online learning “a politicized term”
(Hodges et al. 2020). Scenario 1 (2001, p.79) refers
to the “Dominance of the classroom/individual
teacher model”. Twenty years later, this has been
changed to “Schools continue to operate under the
classroom/individual adult model” (2020, p.45),
which clearly means that technology is going to
replace the well-educated teacher and other
individuals will be involved in knowledge delivery. A
displacement of teaching professionals and a change
in teaching and learning is apparent throughout the
four scenarios e.g.A reduced but distinct, well-
trained teaching corps remains in charge of designing
learning content and activities”. In the new learning
environment, the teacher becomes a designer, a
coach, a mentor and a facilitator (Schleicher, 2020),
but this new elevated role concerns only a small
portion of the teachers who are in service today.
Paraphrasing Meyer (1981): Over reliance on
technology will affect teaching, dilute skills, degrade
work and transform social relationships in schools
and universities. Technical and organizational
innovation will displace academic expertise and
administrative staff will supervise the knowledge
delivery system run by computers, in virtual classes,
through networks. Technology will standardize the
design and the content of teaching globally. ICT using
the most recent advantages of information technology
will transfer academic knowledge and skills from the
teachers to sophisticated and complicated
technologies. In effect this will Taylorize education
and reduce its cost. Some teachers will play the role
managers and engineers played in Ford’s lines: they
will set up the learning machine. This will bring new
forms of control in schools and University
departments.
Information and communication technologies will
play a central role in the post-COVID education. It is
a journey to the unknown, where “innovation and
change is important”. The new normal “is not just
possible, it is essential. There is no going back”
(UNICEF, 26/10/2020). These words convey a
message of determination. There is little room for
discussion or compromise, but there is plenty of room
for contribution on decisions made.
Can technology provide a viable solution to
literacy and education? The question is not a new one.
Distance teaching fifty years ago was implemented
via correspondence, posted material for written work,
radio and television programs (Antonowicz,
Soobrayan, 2020). Fifty years of research in the
United States, in the application of new technologies
and development of new methods have not been
translated in improved reading abilities for students
(Sarewitz, Nelson, 2008). The various modalities of
distance learning provide the opportunity for
knowledge availability at any place and any time but
they do not ensure learning. Besides, distance
learning means “psychological isolation, lack of skills
or low self-confidence, alienation from campus
Post-COVID-19 Education: A Case of Technology Driven Change?
609
environments even for those living next door, cultural
distance, and value dissonance with educational
institutions (Stunkel, 1991). In resonance with the
aforementioned considerations a recent UNICEF
publication (Yankova, 2020) notices that, half of the
students in Bulgaria experienced negative feelings,
such as loneliness, insecurity, irritability and anxiety
due to reduced social contacts during the period of
social distancing. What about the new role of the
teacher? Technology has not always made working
life better or more interesting. Unlike mainstream
management thought changes are not linear neither
planned. Their outcome is a compromise which
hopefully will open the way for taking advantage of
the new technologies in education.
Thirty years ago, Edith Stunkel (1991)
commented on the novel teaching modalities of those
days noticing, that although traditional classroom
instruction evolved in pre-industrial medieval
European countries it still casts a long shadow on
distance education as a second-class form of
instruction. It is still a question how the new
technologies, which can simulate face-to-face
communication, can build upon a successful
paradigm.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors are grateful to the anonymous referees
for their comments and to C. Anastasiadis for helpful
discussions.
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