Welcome to the Virtual Education Wiki ~ Open Education Wiki
VISCED-20: Difference between revisions
(/* VISCED-20: advance warning of global online survey) |
(added link to 10 May Symposium) |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
== VISCED-20: Best practice from virtual schools to use for taking place-based schools online - in a resilient fashion == | == VISCED-20: Best practice from virtual schools to use for taking place-based schools online - in a resilient fashion == | ||
Attendance at this webinar is '''free'''. | |||
Book tickets at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/learning-resilience-network-lessons-learned-from-covid-19-tickets-152334888753 | |||
Speakers: | |||
#Jacqueline Daniell, CEO Wey Education plc | |||
#Santosh Kumar, CEO and Co-Founder 21K School | |||
#Paul Bacsich, CEO Dualversity | |||
Chair: Dr Michelle Selinger, ConsultEdu Ltd | |||
#VISCED20 #virtualschool #educationalresilience | |||
=== Summary of VISCED-20 project === | |||
From mid 2020 the '''Dualversity''' team have been working on a short project VISCED-20, a pilot for a proposed longer study, but one which aims in this phase to collect useful information relevant to schools, policy experts and ministries trying to cope with the situation of whole or partial school closure and online teaching during the Covid-19 pandemic. | From mid 2020 the '''Dualversity''' team have been working on a short project VISCED-20, a pilot for a proposed longer study, but one which aims in this phase to collect useful information relevant to schools, policy experts and ministries trying to cope with the situation of whole or partial school closure and online teaching during the Covid-19 pandemic. | ||
Line 8: | Line 23: | ||
In some countries, as predicted by some, Covid-19 is still affecting schools, for example reducing the choice in the curriculum due to classroom constraints and fewer staff. Moreover, pandemics can recur, not to mention other natural disasters – countries have learned the hard way that we need to be better prepared. | In some countries, as predicted by some, Covid-19 is still affecting schools, for example reducing the choice in the curriculum due to classroom constraints and fewer staff. Moreover, pandemics can recur, not to mention other natural disasters – countries have learned the hard way that we need to be better prepared. | ||
While by and large universities coped quite well, via rapid moves to '''emergency online teaching''', the situation with schools initially seemed much less satisfactory, with some noteworthy exceptions. More generally, progress over the last ten years in systematic use of ICT in schools seems to be modest compared with the expectations of ministries and experts in 2010. While things are better in 2021 all is not well. | While by and large universities coped quite well, via rapid moves to '''emergency online teaching''', the situation with schools initially seemed much less satisfactory, with some noteworthy exceptions. More generally, progress over the last ten years in systematic use of ICT in schools seems to be modest compared with the expectations of ministries and experts in 2010. '''While things are better in 2021 all is not well.''' | ||
Our study has four Pillars. | Our study has four Pillars. These form the basis of our online Survey. | ||
Pillar I. A set of questions, to virtual schools, based on the situation described 9 years ago in a series of VISCED reports for the European Commission (see elsewhere on this wiki): | Pillar I. A set of questions, to virtual schools, based on the situation described 9 years ago in a series of VISCED reports for the European Commission (see elsewhere on this wiki): | ||
Line 27: | Line 42: | ||
Pillar IV. Discussions with key vendors of systems (VLE/LMS) that support virtual schools and large-scale blended learning in place-based schools. | Pillar IV. Discussions with key vendors of systems (VLE/LMS) that support virtual schools and large-scale blended learning in place-based schools. | ||
Since VISCED-20 | Since VISCED-20 has a European aspect it will also look at the value of setting up a European Network of Virtual Schools to be an advisory body to government departments and international agencies on matters of online learning in schools. | ||
We know that there are many virtual schools contacts and relevant pedagogic experts among our colleagues' LinkedIn contacts. The project is running in an agile fashion so hypotheses, tools, contacts and reports are likely to change rapidly. So we would like to hear from you now - you do not need to wait for us to reach out. This is especially because of the different patterns of school summer holidays across Europe. | We know that there are many virtual schools contacts and relevant pedagogic experts among our colleagues' LinkedIn contacts. The project is running in an agile fashion so hypotheses, tools, contacts and reports are likely to change rapidly. So we would like to hear from you now - you do not need to wait for us to reach out. This is especially because of the different patterns of school summer holidays across Europe. | ||
The project | The project looks particularly what features future solutions to provide greater resilience in emergency situations should have, drawing on good practice from territories such as New Zealand, British Columbia or Scotland's Highlands and Islands. | ||
Please email us at | Please email us at visced@dualversity.co.uk for further information or if you have information to send to us. | ||
Latest revision as of 19:59, 4 May 2021
VISCED-20: Best practice from virtual schools to use for taking place-based schools online - in a resilient fashion
Attendance at this webinar is free.
Book tickets at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/learning-resilience-network-lessons-learned-from-covid-19-tickets-152334888753
Speakers:
- Jacqueline Daniell, CEO Wey Education plc
- Santosh Kumar, CEO and Co-Founder 21K School
- Paul Bacsich, CEO Dualversity
Chair: Dr Michelle Selinger, ConsultEdu Ltd
#VISCED20 #virtualschool #educationalresilience
Summary of VISCED-20 project
From mid 2020 the Dualversity team have been working on a short project VISCED-20, a pilot for a proposed longer study, but one which aims in this phase to collect useful information relevant to schools, policy experts and ministries trying to cope with the situation of whole or partial school closure and online teaching during the Covid-19 pandemic.
In some countries, as predicted by some, Covid-19 is still affecting schools, for example reducing the choice in the curriculum due to classroom constraints and fewer staff. Moreover, pandemics can recur, not to mention other natural disasters – countries have learned the hard way that we need to be better prepared.
While by and large universities coped quite well, via rapid moves to emergency online teaching, the situation with schools initially seemed much less satisfactory, with some noteworthy exceptions. More generally, progress over the last ten years in systematic use of ICT in schools seems to be modest compared with the expectations of ministries and experts in 2010. While things are better in 2021 all is not well.
Our study has four Pillars. These form the basis of our online Survey.
Pillar I. A set of questions, to virtual schools, based on the situation described 9 years ago in a series of VISCED reports for the European Commission (see elsewhere on this wiki):
- What is your view of the current state of ICT in school education in your country? In particular did place-based schools have in your view ICT too limited in scope and scale to cope with the needed rapid move to bring about fully online learning? What successes can you point to?
- What influence on national education policy, in normal circumstances, has your virtual school had in your country? And what influence at multinational level (such as EU)?
- To what extent has there been transfer of techno-pedagogic knowledge from your virtual school to face-to-face schools? And what in your view could be transferred to them? and from their “emergency teaching” online practice to your practice?
- To what extent is your virtual school active in the main national and international (e.g. EU) Associations that focus on ICT and that place-based schools belong to, and what influence have you had? To which we add some questions raised specifically by the current emergency:
- To what extent has your virtual school been involved in implementing resilient solutions alone or in partnership with place-based schools during the Covid-19 emergency?
- What is your recommendation as to what should happen better in your country with resilience in the next emergency? What role would you see for a National Learning Resilience Network in your country, region or language group (see definition later in this document) and what do you see your school’s role in it?
Pillar II. A variant of these questions will be asked to a selection of place-based schools (both public-sector and privately run) which were fortunate enough to have already made heavy use of ICT to provide blended learning.
Pillar III. Interviews with university-level e-learning experts on the applicability of university online learning approaches to schools (especially senior secondary schools).
Pillar IV. Discussions with key vendors of systems (VLE/LMS) that support virtual schools and large-scale blended learning in place-based schools.
Since VISCED-20 has a European aspect it will also look at the value of setting up a European Network of Virtual Schools to be an advisory body to government departments and international agencies on matters of online learning in schools.
We know that there are many virtual schools contacts and relevant pedagogic experts among our colleagues' LinkedIn contacts. The project is running in an agile fashion so hypotheses, tools, contacts and reports are likely to change rapidly. So we would like to hear from you now - you do not need to wait for us to reach out. This is especially because of the different patterns of school summer holidays across Europe.
The project looks particularly what features future solutions to provide greater resilience in emergency situations should have, drawing on good practice from territories such as New Zealand, British Columbia or Scotland's Highlands and Islands.
Please email us at visced@dualversity.co.uk for further information or if you have information to send to us.