*The virtual "classroom" is a travesty of education, which (of course) Bill
Gates*
*has been pushing noisily for years (in hopes of profiting from that
disaster, too).  *
https://www.thelavinagency.com/news/bill-gates-on-how-salman-khan-s-online-academy-is-the-future-of-education
https://www.theverge.com/2015/2/11/8014563/bill-gates-education-future-of-online-courses-third-world
https://time.com/5066247/bill-gates-learning-hacks/

*In New York City under lockdown this semester, the experiment has largely*
*failed, as teachers citywide have "opted out" of this unsatisfying
practice,*
*and so education has collapsed along with the economy:*
https://nypost.com/2020/04/30/teachers-across-nyc-abandoning-live-lessons-amid-lockdown/

*On teaching at the college level, here's a thoughtful piece by my friend*
*Jonathan Zimmerman. *

MCM

CHRONICLE OF HIGHER EDUCATION
Video kills the teaching star: Remote learning and the death of charisma

By Jonathan Zimmerman APRIL 24, 2020

In 1960, the University of Missouri published a short "Guide for Television
Teachers." Across the country, over 100 different colleges offered nearly
500 televised courses to a half a million students. So professors needed
pointers about the best way to teach in this burgeoning new medium.
"Relax," the Missouri guide underlined. "Try to be yourself." Male
professors should wear "conservative" ties, the guide added, while women
should avoid necklines or hemlines that might "cause discomfort or
embarrassment" if they leaned over a counter or sat in a low chair. Once
they were properly attired, they could loosen up and let their real
character shine through. "Remember that the TV camera projects your natural
personality best," the guide urged, "and the more relaxed and natural that
you are, the better you will reach your viewers."
Six decades later, you can find similar advice all over the internet. It’s
for online professors, of course, now that the coronavirus has sent all of
us to our computers to teach. But the heart of the guidance is the same as
it was for TV instructors: Easy does it. Act natural. Be yourself.
Indeed, a set of 10 pointers
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www-2Dchronicle-2Dcom.proxy.library.upenn.edu_interactives_advice-2Donline-2Dteaching&d=DwMFaQ&c=slrrB7dE8n7gBJbeO0g-IQ&r=WPIFbgNvuSsRXHIHf0ssPzSxvJeRYoM5Gwwk_VVYXnU&m=Jm9j0FYdKQICwlBtUcPkUjOxFUp986r-arXDguvA2FU&s=R-D8v4Pnh9PeGqr5HJl5dX3nH6PEb-keu-E5ULIBmcY&e=>published
last month in *The Chronicle* lists "be yourself" as the second most
important suggestion (bested only by "show up for class") for online
teaching. It’s not easy to pull off, the author Flower Darby acknowledges,
particularly for professors who are instructing asynchronous classes and
interacting with students mostly by text. But it can be done, she insists,
if you’re deliberate about it.
"Recording yourself whenever possible" is a "great way to bring your whole
self to class," wrote Darby, an instructional designer at Northern Arizona
University. "Whether by audio or video, capture your expertise, your
empathy, your teacher persona. … Look for ways to be yourself via
technology, just as you do in person."
I’m grateful to experts like Darby for coaching all of us through this
abrupt nationwide transition to online teaching. But I’m also skeptical
about whether we can transmit our "real" selves with our laptops. We’re
people, not pixels. And teaching — and learning — are personal acts, which
simply can’t be simulated on a screen.
Sure, you can go to the movies and get pulled into the gravitational
magnetism of Hollywood stars. But we can’t all have the charisma of  a Brad
Pitt or Scarlett Johansson, let alone of your local evening newscaster.
These people are chosen precisely because they can charm you from a
distance. Mere mortals — that means you, professor! — usually can’t do that.
Most of all, the stars of the screen are paid to entertain rather than to
educate. Teaching other human beings requires a "conversation of the soul"
— as the author and activist Parker J. Palmer calls it — instead of an
exchange of images. And real conversation happens when people are in the
same room, not when they’re on the same channel.
That’s the moral of the story of educational television, which was touted
as the solution to an earlier crisis: the sudden overcrowding of American
colleges. Aided by the GI Bill, military veterans flooded into college
classrooms; by 1947, just two years after World War II ended, they made up
fully half of all students. Other middle-class Americans joined them over
the next decade, buoyed by the overall prosperity of the postwar economy.
In 1940, only one in 10 Americans between the ages of 18 and 21 went to
college; in 1958, one in three did.
How could our universities cope with this huge influx of students? One
obvious answer was television, which a University of California official
called "the most efficient, the most economical, and the most personalized
teaching method available." A single professor could instruct thousands of
people at the same time — no matter where they lived — and every student
would get a "front-row seat," he added. "A televised lecture can ‘bring the
instructor close’ even when the students have no personal contact with the
televised lecturer," an enthusiast at New York University gushed.
Some of these students were taught via closed-circuit sets on campus;
others tuned in on broadcast TV, which featured a wide array of
university-sponsored courses. But most of the students concluded that
television could not substitute for the human touch of the actual
classroom. The medium was indeed "personalized," insofar as you could often
watch at home and see the teacher clearly. Yet it was also highly
impersonal, because nobody could convey their real self over the airwaves.
"Having a TV class does not add to my learning," an Ohio University student
flatly declared, after taking a closed-circuit course where he watched the
professor interact with students in a television studio. "I felt as if the
teacher was talking to them and not me, giving a feeling that I was looking
thru a window at the class."
Professors got the same feeling from the other side of the imaginary
looking glass. At Penn State, where 3,700 of the school’s 14,000 students
were registered for a televised course in 1959, one instructor said he
missed the "person-to-person contact from the teacher-student
relationship." Students in a closed-circuit-TV class on campus "felt no
need to pay attention out of courtesy to the instructor," a second Penn
State professor observed. They read newspapers, slept, or stared into space
rather than at the flickering screen in front of them.
None of that prevented university administrators from singing the praises
of educational TV into the 1960s and 1970s. "The business of learning
demanded that we embrace the electronic goddess and that we voice
extravagant claims of her miraculous powers," a former television
instructor at New York University recalled. "Never mind that the students
went to sleep. Never mind if this experiment destroyed rapport between
teacher and student. Every emperor chooses the clothes with which to cover
his nudity."
I’m teaching two 15-student seminars this term, so I was able to get to
know my students before the coronavirus crisis began. But the move to
online has placed a wedge between us, nevertheless. We can’t experience the
same warmth or humor or group bonding. We see each other, but only through
a window.
And we’re the lucky ones. In their big lecture classes, my students tell
me, any semblance of real connection with their professors has been lost.
It’s all fine and good to say that students should get "a sense of who you
are and what kind of person you are," as the Australian remote-learning
expert Keith Heggart recently recommended
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.tes.com_magazine_article_coronavirus-2Dhow-2Dmaximise-2Ddistance-2Dlearning&d=DwMFaQ&c=slrrB7dE8n7gBJbeO0g-IQ&r=WPIFbgNvuSsRXHIHf0ssPzSxvJeRYoM5Gwwk_VVYXnU&m=Jm9j0FYdKQICwlBtUcPkUjOxFUp986r-arXDguvA2FU&s=fOg5aY_7rLeFXLjzE4CEYmupjkOydF2A216l44tlIgA&e=>,
advising online teachers. It’s quite another to give them one, and to have
them believe it.
"Without student contact, I don’t want to teach," one professor told
researchers in 1967, denouncing televised classes. "Students need personal
contact because, after all, learning is a spiritual process." That sounds
mystical and ineffable, I know, but all of us have experienced it in our
classrooms. And it’s a fool’s errand to pretend that a television — or a
computer — can replace it.
Social distancing is necessary to preserve good health, but it’s not good
for education. And if you think otherwise, just ask your students. Online
instruction might be our new emperor, at least for the moment, but we
shouldn’t deny what’s right in front of our eyes.
*Jonathan Zimmerman teaches education and history at the University of
Pennsylvania. He is the author of *The Amateur Hour: A History of College
Teaching in America,* which will be published in the fall by Johns Hopkins
University Press.*

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