TEACHERS NEED TO BE A FOCUS OF
SUPPORT
Lack of professional support and insufficient digital
skills among teachers have often proved to be the main
obstacles to education continuity. Teachers have pointed
out that the guidelines they received were insufficient
to support them. The guidelines did not indicate how
to respond when teachers or students lacked access to
internet or digital devices or when teachers lacked remote
teaching skills. A study of about 1,000 primary school
teachers in Poland found that 85% had no experience
with distance learning before the pandemic outbreak,
and 52% reported some difficulty using digital tools. In
addition, 36% indicated that lack of equipment among
students impeded distance education (Open Education
Policy Network, 2020). Some countries, including Albania
and Lithuania, have tried to provide digital devices for
students and teachers to enable them to participate in
remote learning.
Various countries organized in-service training or online
consultations on remote learning. Examples include the
two-week course ‘How to conduct distance learning
effectively’ in Armenia and the online course ‘Let´s get
ready for distance learning’ in Belarus. In Kazakhstan,
in-service training that was intended to be provided in
person was redesigned and transformed into online
formats. Lithuania’s Ministry of Education, Science
and Sport organized around 50 consultations about
online education, online safety and digital learning
facilities. In Ukraine, the online marathon ‘Education
under the quarantine’ provided an opportunity to
exchange experiences on top of other in-service training
opportunities.
One weakness of training initiatives is that they tend to
involve only the most motivated teachers; for instance,
digital skills development involved only ‘active’ teachers,
leaving behind those who may have needed the training
the most. Ideally, school leaders should identify individual
needs, especially regarding digital skills and integrating
technology into instructional practice, to target such
teachers and encourage them to upgrade their skills. A
related obstacle has been scheduling, as teachers have
noted that their workload during the pandemic has been
higher than average.
Considering teachers’ current levels of digital literacy
and average age, complementary solutions include
strengthening partnerships among students and
teachers, schools and families, and public and private
actors. In addition, teachers have collaborated to support
each other. In Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Centre for
Education Initiatives Step by Step, an NGO, involved
members of the Community of Innovative Teachers and
proposed more than 200 ideas for classroom practice,
shared by teachers, that were posted on a web platform.
In Ukraine, teacher teams collaborated on individualized
plans for students with special education needs.
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