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Moving to online learning after spring break

A week has passed after spring break, but none of my classmates, professors, and other staff has set foot on campus again, not only in Georgetown, but in many if not all colleges and K-12 schools all over the US, maybe even the world.

Transitioning to online classes shouldn’t be a struggle. I’ve had work from home and remote work arrangements before. And our classes – part of a graduate program in learning, design, and technology – are not foreign to remote and virtual learning environments. Online learning should be coming naturally, both in theory and practice. Just last week, I sent in a mid-term paper on online learning and Biesta’s purposes of education.

But there I was missing assignment deadlines and appreciating the fact that some of my professors have dialed back on assigning readings this past week. Perhaps it was from finishing a paper over spring break. Or more likely, I’ve put priority on shadowing colleagues as we held office hours during work days for faculty. Then I picked up shifts for office hours to assist faculty move their teaching online and work their way around Canvas and Zoom, via Zoom.

I didn’t plan to work over the break, having looked forward to it only three weeks in the new semester. But I saw it coming. My office has been holding meetings days before the break, bracing for the onslaught of this monstrous wave, watching it from the opposite shore as it approached our way. It arrived by way of an email from the university president, first for a couple of weeks, and later for the rest of the semester.

Most faculty will have taught their first classes post-spring break by now. The classes are by no means expected to be perfect versions of their classroom counterpart. Debates are still going on in education institutions whether to shift to pass or fail, synchronous or asynchronous, or whether to continue or stop teaching altogether in this unsettling time. 

I looked forward to my classes this past week, a welcome diversion that gave me the slightest sense of normalcy, where for a couple of hours we were able to gather and see familiar faces to talk about learning, higher education, education technology, their confluence and multifaceted challenges, as we have been doing in the past seven months. It wasn’t much of a form of escape. It was a short circuit in our graduate program, and the world, as we are now living through the very topics and challenges in higher ed that we have been discussing all along.

Why start this blog?

My goal in starting this blog is to make sense of the theories and tools I’m picking up while in graduate school and be a part of the conversation on the social and economic shifts happening in learning and education. I’m interested in the intersection of education, learning design, technology, and society, particularly but not limited to online learning.

I want to share my thoughts on learning design and edtech to educators, subject matter experts, students, instructional designers and everyone who cares about education. As I write this, I’m in my second semester in the MA in Learning, Design, and Technology program at Georgetown University in Washington D.C. I also work part-time as a Graduate Associate at Center for New Designs in Learning and Scholarship at the university. My background is in international development, particularly in policy and programming, knowledge management, and communications in the areas of climate change, agriculture, and environment. I’m from the Philippines but I’ve also lived in Germany and am now in the US. I also hope to share my experiences and reach out to those considering entering the field of edtech and learning design, especially those coming from a different domain like me.

If you want to learn more, check out my about me page. Feel free to leave a comment or send a message. I’m also quite active on Twitter.

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