For me, Distance Learning, or Remote Instruction, or whatever your institution called it, has been “building the plane while we’re flying it,” as one colleague put it. Will be flying steady by Fall 2020, though? We teachers know things won’t be normal, but we also know we don’t want another semester like the one we’ve just struggled through.
There’s a lot, and I mean a lot, to sort out. I want to focus here on one question: how will we design and deliver instruction?
My assumption is that it will be some combination of on-site teaching and online teaching. I’ve looked at a lot of resources on “Hybrid Learning,” but here’s the thing. Those resources are talking at planning to meet on Tuesday, have an online discussion board post due Thursday, that sort of thing.
But that’s not what we’re facing in the fall. We’re facing a situation where our plans will have to change at the drop of a hat. Sudden closures. Partial closures. We might be in school for a few weeks, when someone in the community tests positive for COVID-19. Or when the governor declares schools closed again. In other words, we have to plan for the unplannable.
I’m particularly concerned about project-based classes, which rely heavily on on-site resources, equipment, and supplies. How will these pivot to home instruction? We surely can’t continue to teach art, design, chemistry, physics, etc. the way we’ve had to teach these subjects this spring.
“Hybrid Instruction” isn’t the right label for what we need to plan for this fall. Instead, it needs to be something fluid. Something that — especially for project-based classes — can nimbly pivot from on-site to online and back again.