6 strategies for improving distance learning
Distance and blended learning have never been implemented at the scale they will be in the 2020-21 school year, but these 6 strategies could make distance learning more successful
Distance and blended learning have never been implemented at the scale they will be in the 2020-21 school year, but these 6 strategies could make distance learning more successful
It's not easy to teach young children remotely. These strategies can help make instruction accessible and engaging—for students and their families.
Some schools remote learning schedules can leave parents feeling frustrated
Coding and robotics can be just as engaging when students learn from home--all it takes is a little planning and some creativity
How libraries can help students during remote learning
One big complication with K-12 distance learning is how hard it is to get children and teens to log in and do their schoolwork. But there are things teachers and families can do to help.
Students will need flexibility as they face a future of work that will operate increasingly as a gig economy and—since the COVID outbreak—a remote economy, says one K-12 expert.
Moving beyond pitched debates about whether kids should be in school or not, California schools are participating in a giant experiment never attempted in the state — or anywhere in the world for that matter: nearly 6 million students will be learning online
College is expensive with tuition doubling over the past few decades. But what’s the value of a college education in the pandemic, where classes normally taught in person will instead be offered either fully or partly online?
Students of all abilities can better cope with coronavirus-related uncertainties when educators help them with resilience—and teaching related skills can be done in-person or through virtual learning.